Trippy

2 artworks

  • Tranquility Giclee Print by Royyal Dog- Chris Chanyang Shim

    Royyal Dog- Chris Chanyang Shim Tranquility Giclee Print by Royyal Dog- Chris Chanyang Shim

    Tranquility Giclee Print by Royyal Dog- Chris Chanyang Shim Artwork Limited Edition Print on 310gsm Cotton Rag Fine Art Paper Graffiti Pop Street Artist. 2023 Signed & Numbered Limited Edition of 10 Artwork Size 12x23 "Tranquility" is a giclee print by Royyal Dog, an artist whose real name is Chris Chanyang Shim. The term "giclee print" refers to a high-quality, fine art digital print made with an inkjet printer. These prints are known for their vibrant colors, longevity, and attention to detail. Chris Chanyang Shim, or Royyal Dog, is a South Korean artist who has gained recognition for his incredible talent in creating hyper-realistic and vibrant portraits. His artwork often features intricate details and bold color palettes that capture the essence of his subjects. Royyal Dog's works have been exhibited in numerous galleries and exhibitions worldwide, and he has garnered a substantial following for his distinctive style. "Tranquility" showcases the artist's signature style and mastery of his medium. As with many of his other works, the subject of the piece is a portrait of a woman that exudes a sense of calm, serenity, or contemplative depth. As with any artwork, individual interpretation is essential, and the title of the piece suggests that the viewer should experience a sense of peace and stillness when engaging with it.

    $366.00

  • Industry Sunset Giclee Print by Cinta Vidal

    Cinta Vidal Industry Sunset Giclee Print by Cinta Vidal

    Industry Sunset Artwork Giclee Limited Edition Print on 290gsm Fine Art Paper by Pop Culture Graffiti Artist Cinta Vidal. Edition of 40 16x23 inches / 40.6x58.4cm Fine art print on 290gsm paper Signed and numbered by the artist

    $174.00

Trippy Graffiti Street Pop Art

Trippy as Visual Disruption in Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork

Trippy is a term often associated with altered states and psychedelic imagery, but in the context of Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork, it serves as a dynamic tool for disrupting visual logic and cultural expectations. Artists across generations have used trippy aesthetics to challenge linear thinking and confront passive viewership. These works often feature optical illusions, warped anatomy, vivid color clashes, and surrealist motifs that pull from both psychedelic subculture and mass media iconography. Within graffiti and pop traditions, the trippy sensibility transforms walls, canvases, and prints into portals that distort time, identity, and perception.

From Psychedelia to Urban Expression

The origins of trippy imagery in art trace back to the countercultural revolution of the 1960s, where music posters, underground zines, and album covers became laboratories for visual experimentation. Those same hallucinogenic patterns and color explosions migrated to street walls in the 1980s and 1990s, merging with graffiti tags and hip-hop-driven iconography. Street Pop Art expanded the application, embedding comic book fonts, ad logos, and cartoon faces into warped universes. Artists like Kenny Scharf and Rammellzee bent the visual grid with compositions that felt electric and unstable, helping cement trippy as a cornerstone of rebellious visual language in the urban art scene.

Color Theory and Chaos in Contemporary Use

In contemporary graffiti and Street Pop Art, trippy does not always mean nostalgic. It often pushes forward with updated palettes that lean into digital glow, neon bleed, and glitch-inspired gradients. The result is a visual overload that mimics modern digital overstimulation while retaining the freedom and intensity of analog psychedelia. Trippy artworks collapse space and perspective, forcing viewers to navigate layered elements that twist traditional forms into something surreal and saturated. Through this method, trippy becomes more than a style—it is a visual commentary on fragmentation, repetition, and subconscious interpretation.

Trippy as a Cultural Frequency

Trippy is not simply an aesthetic decision. It is an assertion of freedom against rigid design standards and intellectual containment. In Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork, trippy energy creates space for joy, confusion, rebellion, and deep reflection. Whether rendered in fine art prints, hand-painted murals, or underground zines, the trippy impulse keeps the medium alive by refusing to sit still or be decoded easily. It is unpredictable, often humorous, sometimes menacing, but always immersive. As artists continue to explore what urban art can say and feel like, trippy remains one of its most powerful visual frequencies.

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© 2025 Sprayed Paint Art Collection,

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