Trippy

307 artworks

  • Skeleton Heart Blotter Paper Archival Print by Tara McPherson

    Tara McPherson Skeleton Heart Blotter Paper Archival Print by Tara McPherson

    Skeleton Heart Blotter Paper Archival Print by Tara McPherson Limited Edition Fine Art Archival Pigment Print Art on Perforated Blotter Paper. 2023 Signed & Numbered Limited Edition of 50 Archival Pigment Print on Perforated Blotter Paper Size: 7.5 x 7.5 Inches Release: April 19, 2023 Limited blotter editions are hand-perforated by Zane Kesey. Blotter paper artwork prints are a unique form of art that involves transferring ink onto specially treated blotter paper. The resulting prints are often abstract and colorful, and can be used for a variety of decorative and artistic purposes. To create a blotter paper artwork print, the artist first prepares the blotter paper by treating it with chemicals that will enhance its absorbency and ability to hold ink or dye. Then, ink or dye is applied to the paper using various techniques, such as dripping, pouring, or spraying. The paper is left to dry, and the resulting print is then carefully removed from the blotter paper. Archival printing techniques are used to produce high-quality prints of the original artwork. This involves using high-quality inks and paper that are designed to last for a long time without fading or deteriorating. Archival prints are also resistant to moisture and sunlight, which helps to preserve the artwork for years to come. Blotter paper artwork prints can be a great addition to any home or office decor, and they are often used as a unique form of wall art. They are also popular among collectors and art enthusiasts, as each print is one-of-a-kind and can never be replicated exactly.

    $360.00

  • Marching to Oblivion Blue Raspberry Silkscreen Print by Dalek- James Marshall

    Dalek- James Marshall Marching to Oblivion Blue Raspberry Silkscreen Print by Dalek- James Marshall

    Marching to Oblivion Blue Raspberry Silkscreen Print by Dalek- James Marshall 13 Color Hand-Pulled on Blue Raspberry Card Stock Fine Art French Paper Co Limited Edition Screenprint Artwork. 2025 Signed & Numbered Limited Edition of 12 Artwork Size 18x24 Silkscreen Print Marching to Oblivion Blue Raspberry by Dalek (James Marshall) in Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork Marching to Oblivion Blue Raspberry is a limited edition silkscreen print released in 2025 by American artist James Marshall, known professionally as Dalek. Measuring 18 by 24 inches, this vibrant screenprint was produced in a small run of twelve, each signed and numbered by the artist. Printed by hand using thirteen colors on Blue Raspberry card stock from the French Paper Company, this work demonstrates the technical precision and conceptual intent that Dalek brings to Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork. Marshall first gained recognition for his Space Monkey character, which served as a foundation for his exploration of identity, repetition, and urban visual culture. This piece reflects his continued evolution through high-contrast compositions, bold color fields, and animated character design rooted in both street art and contemporary pop aesthetics. Visual Language and Character Aesthetics The central figure in Marching to Oblivion Blue Raspberry is a hyper-energized creature with bright green limbs, circular mouse-like ears, and a wide, exaggerated mouth punctuated with polka-dot colors. The character is captured mid-motion, rhythmically juggling toy-like mallets while dancing atop a minimalistic gray platform. The cyan-blue background offers striking contrast, pushing the character forward in a burst of visual noise and balance. Each limb and accessory has been carefully positioned to evoke movement, volume, and rhythm without relying on traditional depth cues. This precise, graphic composition speaks to Dalek’s background in illustration and graffiti, where storytelling often happens in frozen frames of chaos. The use of bright, flat colors, iconic shapes, and cartoon logic aligns this piece firmly within Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork, blending urban visual codes with gallery-level execution. Material Process and Printmaking Precision Executed through a thirteen-color hand-pulled silkscreen process, this print demonstrates a refined commitment to craft and color theory. The Blue Raspberry cardstock provides an unconventional foundation that transforms the background into an active visual element rather than a passive support. This material choice amplifies the fluorescent color palette while maintaining a sense of tactile richness. Each ink layer was applied manually, reinforcing the physical labor often associated with graffiti and mural practices. The careful registration and color saturation required for this level of quality elevate the piece to a standard of contemporary printmaking rarely achieved in editions this small. The hand-pulled nature of the print ensures that subtle variations exist between each copy, emphasizing the importance of uniqueness even in a multiple. Cultural Relevance and Street Pop Evolution Dalek’s Marching to Oblivion Blue Raspberry serves as more than a static image—it operates as a cultural document of the fusion between street energy and pop precision. James Marshall continues to explore visual intensity without sacrificing clarity or depth. His art speaks to the performative and repetitive aspects of daily life, represented through his chaotic yet controlled characters. The tension between play and purpose, repetition and spontaneity, mirrors the structure of graffiti itself: repetitive tags, ritualistic motion, and bursts of controlled energy in public view. This print brings those values to the collector’s wall without erasing their roots. It exists within Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork as both homage and innovation, offering a clean yet electric artifact that speaks directly to audiences familiar with the pulse of contemporary visual culture.

    $340.00

  • Baby Doll Blotter Paper Archival Print by Niagara

    Niagara Baby Doll Blotter Paper Archival Print by Niagara

    Baby Doll Blotter Paper Limited Edition Archival Pigment Print Art on Perforated Blotter Paper by Niagara pop culture LSD artwork. Archival Pigment Print on Perforated Blotter Paper Size: 7.5 x 7.5 Inches Release: April 19, 2021 These limited blotter editions are hand-perforated by Zane Kesey. The alignment of the perforations over the artwork may vary slightly from the example shown.

    $352.00

  • Riding In The Neighbourhood Blotter Paper Archival Print by El Pez

    El Pez Riding In The Neighbourhood Blotter Paper Archival Print by El Pez

    Riding In The Neighbourhood Limited Edition Fine Art Blotter Paper Archival Pigment Print Art on Perforated Blotter Paper by Modern Pop Artist Pez. 2022 Signed & Numbered Limited Edition of 50 Archival Pigment Print on Perforated Blotter Paper Size: 7.5 x 7.5 Inches Release: April 19, 2022 Limited blotter editions are hand-perforated by Zane Kesey.

    $352.00

  • Styles Giclee Print by Low Bros

    Low Bros Styles Giclee Print by Low Bros

    Styles Artwork Giclee Limited Edition Print on 290gsm Fine Art Paper by Pop Culture Graffiti Artist Low Bros. 2015 Signed & Numbered Limited Edition of 75 Artwork Size 16x20 Silkscreen Printed by SerioPress. Fusion of Street Pop Art and graffiti Artwork in Limited Edition Prints Limited edition prints hold a special place in art collecting, often serving as a more accessible entry point for enthusiasts to own a piece of significant artwork. The "Styles" artwork by Low Bros exemplifies this intersection of collectibility and accessibility within Street Pop Art and graffiti Artwork. The artwork is a Giclée print on 290gsm fine art paper, a medium known for reproducing art with high fidelity. The Technique and Medium The Giclée printing process for "Styles" allows for the fine gradations of color and sharp detail that this piece necessitates. The 290gsm fine art paper provides a smooth, substantial surface that captures the depth and vibrancy of the original work. The result is a print that not only faithfully represents the artwork but also stands the test of time due to the materials' quality. Visual Composition and Edition "Styles" is a 16x20 inch print, a size that is well-suited for intimate viewing yet large enough to showcase the complex and dynamic composition characteristic of Low Bros' work. The limited edition of 75 prints means that each piece is part of an exclusive series, signed and numbered by the artists, adding a personal touch that connects the collector directly to the creators' vision. Artistic Signature and Process The Low Bros are known for their distinctive aesthetic, often featuring bold colors, geometric patterns, and thematic elements drawn from pop culture and street aesthetics. Their work on "Styles" continues this tradition, offering a visual narrative that is both striking and thought-provoking. SerioPress, renowned for its expertise in silkscreen printing, has ensured that each print is produced precisely, reflecting the artists' meticulous standards. Cultural Relevance "Styles" is more than just a print; it is a cultural artifact that captures the essence of street art's influence on contemporary visual culture. In the hands of Low Bros, the print becomes a canvas for exploring themes relevant to pop and graffiti art, such as urban life, identity, and subcultural expression. The work engages with its audience by bridging the underground with the mainstream, encapsulating the transformative power of street art. The Impact of Collecting Collectors of Street Pop Art and graffiti Artwork often seek to acquire art and support the artists and the movement they represent. Owning a piece like "Styles" allows collectors to participate in the ongoing dialogue between street art and the fine art world. As street art continues to gain recognition, these limited edition prints gain historical significance and potential for appreciation in value. The "Styles" limited edition Giclée print by Low Bros is a standout piece within the genres of Street Pop Art and graffiti Artwork, reflecting the intricate interplay between form, content, and culture. This artwork embodies the evolving narrative of street art's place in the wider art world through advanced printing techniques and fine art materials. The Low Bros' dedication to their craft and engagement with contemporary themes make "Styles" a coveted piece for collectors and a testament to the genre's enduring impact.

    $159.00

  • Abstraction Pollock Red Green Original Oil Painting by Samuel Kamen

    Samuel Kamen Abstraction Pollock Red Green Original Oil Painting by Samuel Kamen

    Abstraction Pollock Red Green Original One of a Kind Oil Painting Artwork on Vellum Paper by Post Modern Artist Samuel Kamen. 20th Century 12.25x14.5 Signed Original

    $751.00

  • Woodstock Daze Blotter Paper Archival Print by Ron English- POPaganda

    Ron English- POPaganda Woodstock Daze Blotter Paper Archival Print by Ron English- POPaganda

    Woodstock Daze Blotter Paper Limited Edition Archival Pigment Print Art on Perforated Blotter Paper by Ron English- POPaganda pop culture LSD artwork. Archival Pigment Print on Perforated Blotter Paper Size: 7.5 x 7.5 Inches Release: April 19, 2021 Limited blotter editions are hand-perforated by Zane Kesey & may vary slightly from the example shown.

    $529.00

  • Cafe Blotter Paper Archival Print by El Pez

    El Pez Cafe Blotter Paper Archival Print by El Pez

    Cafe Blotter Paper Limited Edition Archival Pigment Print Art on Perforated Blotter Paper by Pez pop culture LSD artwork. Archival Pigment Print on Perforated Blotter Paper Size: 7.5 x 7.5 Inches Release: April 19, 2021. Limited blotter editions are hand-perforated by Zane Kesey & may vary slightly from the example shown. "Cafe Blotter Paper" is a spirited piece of limited edition artwork by Pez, recognized for his vibrant and whimsical approach to street pop art. This archival pigment print on perforated blotter paper was released on April 19, 2021, and it stands as a distinctive example of the cross-pollination between pop culture and the psychedelic art movement often associated with LSD artwork. The piece measures 7.5 x 7.5 inches, a size that echoes the traditional dimensions of blotter art. The print features Pez's signature cartoonish characters and motifs: joyful figures with exaggerated features in a dynamic, color-saturated environment. Their playful antics are set against a backdrop of a pastiche of psychedelic and pop art elements, which nods to the notion of cafe culture. Each blotter edition is hand-perforated by Zane Kesey, ensuring that while each print is part of a limited series, individual pieces may have slight variations, adding to the uniqueness and collectibility of the artwork. The meticulous hand-perforation process not only pays homage to the history of blotter art but also imbues the piece with a handmade quality highly prized in the world of street pop art and graffiti. Pez's "Cafe Blotter Paper" captures the essence of street pop art's playful and irreverent spirit, bringing a sense of joy and nostalgia to the viewer. This work reflects the artist's ability to transform a conventional medium into a canvas for creativity, showcasing how street art and pop culture can come together to create pieces that are both visually arresting and culturally significant. The artwork is a vibrant testament to the innovation and energy of contemporary street art.

    $352.00

  • Last Angel LSD Blotter Paper Archival Print by MAD

    Mad Last Angel LSD Blotter Paper Archival Print by MAD

    Last Angel LSD Blotter Paper Limited Edition Archival Pigment Print Art on Perforated Blotter Paper by MAD pop culture LSD artwork. 2021 Signed & Numbered Limited Edition of 35 Artwork Size 7.5x7.5 Archival Pigment Print on Perforated Blotter Paper Size: 7.5 x 7.5 Inches Release: April 19, 2021. Limited blotter editions are hand-perforated by Zane Kesey & may vary slightly from the example shown.

    $352.00

  • Shut Up Or Ill Kill You Violet Blotter Paper Archival Print by Niagara

    Niagara Shut Up Or Ill Kill You Violet Blotter Paper Archival Print by Niagara

    Shut Up Or I'll Kill You- Violet Blotter Paper Limited Edition Archival Pigment Print Art on Perforated Blotter Paper by Niagara pop culture LSD artwork. Archival Pigment Print on Perforated Blotter Paper Size: 7.5 x 7.5 Inches Release: April 19, 2021 Limited blotter editions are hand-perforated by Zane Kesey & may vary slightly from the example shown.

    $352.00

  • Abstraction Drip Wide Brown Blood Original Oil Painting by Samuel Kamen

    Samuel Kamen Abstraction Drip Wide Brown Blood Original Oil Painting by Samuel Kamen

    Abstraction Drip Wide Brown Blood Original One of a Kind Oil Painting Artwork on Vellum Paper by Post Modern Artist Samuel Kamen. 20th Century 20.5x9 Signed Original

    $631.00

  • Johnny Face Shoo Fly Blotter Paper Archival Print by John Van Hamersveld

    John Van Hamersveld Johnny Face Shoo Fly Blotter Paper Archival Print by John Van Hamersveld

    Johnny Face- Shoo Fly Limited Edition Fine Art Blotter Paper Archival Pigment Print Art on Perforated Blotter Paper by Modern Pop Artist John Van Hamersveld. 2022 Signed & Numbered Limited Edition of 50 Archival Pigment Print on Perforated Blotter Paper Size: 7.5 x 7.5 Inches Release: April 19, 2022 Limited blotter editions are hand-perforated by Zane Kesey.

    $352.00

  • Lizard Blotter Paper Archival Print by Stanley Mouse

    Stanley Mouse Lizard Blotter Paper Archival Print by Stanley Mouse

    Lizard Blotter Paper Limited Edition Archival Pigment Print Art on Perforated Blotter Paper by Stanley Mouse pop culture LSD artwork. Archival Pigment Print on Perforated Blotter Paper Size: 7.5 x 7.5 Inches Release: April 19, 2021 Limited blotter editions are hand-perforated by Zane Kesey & may vary slightly from the example shown.

    $533.00

  • Polygondwanaland Blotter Paper Archival Print by Ed Irmen

    Ed Irmen Polygondwanaland Blotter Paper Archival Print by Ed Irmen

    Polygondwanaland Blotter Paper Limited Edition Archival Pigment Print Art on Perforated Blotter Paper by Ed Irmen pop culture LSD artwork. Archival Pigment Print on Perforated Blotter Paper Size: 7.5 x 7.5 Inches Release: April 19, 2021 Limited blotter editions are hand-perforated by Zane Kesey & may vary slightly from the example shown.

    $352.00

  • Styles AP Giclee Print by Low Bros

    Low Bros Styles AP Giclee Print by Low Bros

    Styles AP Artist Proof Artwork Giclee Limited Edition Print on 290gsm Fine Art Paper by Pop Culture Graffiti Artist Low Bros. AP Artist Proof 2015 Signed & MArked AP Limited Edition Artwork Size 6x20 Giclee Printed by SerioPress. Artist Proofs in the Realm of Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork Artist Proofs (APs) hold a distinguished position in the art world, often seen as the gold standard for collectors and connoisseurs of print art. The "Styles" AP giclée print by the Low Bros is a testament to this tradition, particularly within the vibrant domains of Street Pop Art and graffiti Artwork. As an AP, this limited edition print carries an aura of exclusivity, being part of a select group of prints set aside from the main edition, often used for promotional purposes or as personal keepsakes for the artists. The Creation of "Styles" by Low Bros "Styles" emerged from the creative milieu of 2015, when Low Bros consolidated their position as leading figures in the pop culture graffiti art landscape. The artwork, giclée printed on 290gsm fine art paper, reflects their signature aesthetic that bridges the gap between the rawness of street art and the finesse of gallery-worthy pieces. The 290gsm paper is a heavy, museum-quality substrate chosen for its smooth surface that ensures the vibrancy of giclée prints, which employ inkjet technology to achieve an accuracy of color and detail not possible through traditional Giclee methods. The Exclusivity and Collectibility of AP Prints This particular AP print of "Styles" is signed by the Low Bros and distinctly marked as an Artist Proof, signifying its importance and rarity. Collectors and enthusiasts of Street Pop Art and graffiti Artwork often seek out APs due to their limited nature and direct connection to the artist's intent. Moreover, the dimensions of the print, noted as 16x20 inches, provide a generous canvas that captures the intricate details and bold colorations typical of Low Bros' designs. SerioPress's Role in Printing "Styles" The responsibility of bringing "Styles" to fruition fell to SerioPress, a name synonymous with quality in fine art printmaking. Known for their precision and dedication to maintaining the integrity of the original artwork, SerioPress's expertise in Giclee printing contributed to the high caliber of this limited edition print. Their collaboration with Low Bros to create "Styles" ensured that each print met the rigorous standards expected by the artists and their followers. The Artistic Impact of Low Bros' "Styles" Low Bros' "Styles" is more than a mere print; it stands as a symbol of the cultural zeitgeist, encapsulating the dynamism and innovative spirit of Street Pop Art and graffiti Artwork. The imagery, often featuring stylized, angular animal motifs against a backdrop of urban iconography, speaks to the viewer on multiple levels, challenging perceptions and inviting dialogue. The artwork, with its depth of concept and execution, exemplifies the Low Bros' contribution to contemporary art. The "Styles" AP Artist Proof by the Low Bros occupies a prestigious niche within Street Pop Art and graffiti Artwork, combining technical mastery with a keen cultural commentary. As an Artist Proof, it is a prized possession that embodies the intersection of street sensibilities with the sophistication of fine art printmaking. For collectors, owning such a print is not merely an acquisition but an investment in the rich narrative of street art's evolution and its ongoing dialogue with the broader world of contemporary art.

    $507.00

  • Artboard Giclee Print by Nopattern- Chuck Anderson

    Nopattern- Chuck Anderson Artboard Giclee Print by Nopattern- Chuck Anderson

    Artboard Print Artwork Giclee Limited Edition Print on 300gsm Moab Entrada Cotton Rag Paper by Pop Culture Graffiti Artist Nopattern- Chuck Anderson. Giclee Print on Moab Entrada cotton rag 300 GSM with Deckled Edges. Edition of 100. Signed and Numbered by the Artist. 18 x 25 inches NoPattern is the Chicago-based studio of artist, designer, photographer and creative director Chuck Anderson. Known for his surreal use of color and light, pioneering juxtapositions of traditional & digital mediums and endless experimentation, Chuck's work has become highly sought-after by a wide spectrum of brands spanning the fashion. advertising, entertainment, tech, and sports worlds.

    $291.00

  • MickyMask A Blotter Paper Archival Print by Bill Barminski

    Bill Barminski MickyMask A Blotter Paper Archival Print by Bill Barminski

    MickyMask A Blotter Paper Limited Edition Archival Pigment Print Art on Perforated Blotter Paper by Bill Barminski pop culture LSD artwork. Archival Pigment Print on Perforated Blotter Paper Size: 7.5 x 7.5 Inches Release: April 19, 2021 Limited blotter editions are hand-perforated by Zane Kesey & may vary slightly from the example shown.

    $352.00

  • Translucid Giclee Print by Dalek- James Marshall

    Dalek- James Marshall Translucid Giclee Print by Dalek- James Marshall

    Translucid Giclee Print by Dalek- James Marshall Artwork Limited Edition Print on 308gsm Hahnemühle Fine Art Paper Graffiti Pop Street Artist. 2022 Signed & Numbered Limited Edition of 50 Artwork Size 19.69x19.69 Translucid by Dalek: Psychedelic Geometry and Character Deconstruction in Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork Translucid is a 2022 limited edition giclée print by James Marshall, known globally under the moniker Dalek. Created in an edition of 50 and printed on 308gsm Hahnemühle fine art paper, the piece measures 19.69 x 19.69 inches and is both signed and numbered by the artist. Dalek’s work continues to explore the intersection of digital surrealism, animated abstraction, and character disassembly, all delivered through the lens of high-contrast saturation and urban visual syntax. In Translucid, Dalek revisits his Space Monkey universe but pushes it through an explosion of translucent layering, deconstructed movement, and psychedelic repetition, fully encapsulating the energy and philosophy of Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork. At the center of the composition is a hyper-stylized figure with bulbous limbs, cyclopean eyes, and aggressive posture. The colors are electric—neon greens, acid pinks, sky blues, and jet black clashing across a looping, rhythmic design. Each form appears duplicated in offset trails, creating a sense of motion, echo, and dimensional slippage. Arms extend wildly, one arm reaching into space as geometric beams stretch outward from the figure’s head, like a visual shout. Behind the main character, semi-transparent replications ripple outward, suggesting time-lapse, digital lag, or a multi-frame animation frozen in layered stillness. Color, Repetition, and Hyper-Controlled Chaos Dalek’s visual structure in Translucid is anything but accidental. His precise control over linework, curvature, and fill creates a sense of machine-assisted hallucination—balanced and ordered while still feverishly alive. The background cycles in soft circular shadows and bubble-like forms, contrasting against the sharper explosions of the foreground. The result is a tension between kinetic madness and graphic symmetry. This interplay mimics the visual philosophy of graffiti—where repetition, character tags, and layered symbols become identity marks in a sea of controlled chaos. The translucent effect is a key feature. Shadows, ghosted lines, and echo silhouettes hint at multiplicity within a single subject, blurring the boundary between the singular and the cloned. This approach mirrors the digital saturation of contemporary image culture, where icons are constantly remixed, repurposed, and looped across screens. Dalek captures this sensation of visual echo and overload in fine art form, reflecting the pulse of the street in a contained 19.69-inch square. Space Monkey Mutation and Visual Dialogue with Modern Culture The figure in Translucid may stem from Dalek’s iconic Space Monkey identity, but here it has mutated into something more abstract and dynamic. While earlier works presented Space Monkey as a flat, enigmatic observer, Translucid transforms the character into a conduit of movement, shape, and power. It dances, attacks, and glitches, no longer passive but fully integrated into the chaos it once surveyed. The distorted grin, radiating eyes, and disconnected limbs build a mood of paradoxical joy and digital exhaustion. Dalek’s work fits seamlessly into the language of Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork by maintaining an animated energy and conceptual looseness that still delivers refined structure. He distills pop culture, video game rhythm, and graffiti wall aesthetics into a composition that communicates without narrative. Translucid does not tell a story—it emits a frequency. It is a painting you can hear if you look closely enough. Translucid as Artifact of Pop Abstraction and Contemporary Identity Printed on 308gsm Hahnemühle fine art paper, the physical texture and pigment retention elevate Translucid into collector-grade territory while preserving the street-informed aesthetic integrity of Dalek’s work. Each edition carries the same intensity and depth of color, capturing every shadow trail and collision point with exact precision. It is both object and signal—a reminder that visual culture is not linear, and that repetition can be both expressive and destabilizing. James Marshall’s contribution to the Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork canon continues to expand through works like Translucid. This piece encapsulates the language of repetition, kinetic design, and psychedelic commentary, all while maintaining Dalek’s commitment to abstraction rooted in character evolution. Translucid is not about resolution—it is about motion, multiplicity, and the fragmented joy of navigating a world where meaning comes layered, duplicated, and infinitely alive.

    $475.00

  • Guided By Regret Blotter Paper Archival Print by Copyright

    Copyright Guided By Regret Blotter Paper Archival Print by Copyright

    Guided By Regret Blotter Paper Limited Edition Archival Pigment Print Art on Perforated Blotter Paper by Copyright pop culture LSD artwork. Archival Pigment Print on Perforated Blotter Paper Size: 7.5 x 7.5 Inches Release: April 19, 2021 Limited blotter editions are hand-perforated by Zane Kesey & may vary slightly from the example shown.

    $450.00

  • ComplexCon x Mutated Skateboard Deck Set by Takashi Murakami TM/KK

    Takashi Murakami TM/KK ComplexCon x Mutated Skateboard Deck Set by Takashi Murakami TM/KK

    ComplexCon x Mutated Deck Set Fine Art Limited Edition Archival Pigment Print Transfer on Natural Skateboard Deck by Street Artwork Graffiti Artist Takashi Murakami TM/KK. 2019 Printed Limited Edition Skateboard Art Deck Artwork Set of 3 ComplexCon x Mutated Deck Set by Takashi Murakami: Chromatic Mutation in Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork The ComplexCon x Mutated Deck Set by Takashi Murakami, released in 2019, is a limited edition fine art archival pigment print transferred onto a set of three 8 x 31 inch natural wood skateboard decks. Produced under Murakami’s TM/KK imprint and debuted during the cultural phenomenon of ComplexCon, this triptych exemplifies Murakami’s command over hyper-saturated pop imagery, symbology, and mutated character design. The composition features a chaotic, joyfully monstrous creature surrounded by eyes, psychedelic flora, and smiling flowers, delivering a visual explosion that merges Japanese pop surrealism with the raw attitude of Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork. The decks form a single connected image when displayed together, centered on a large mutated bear-like figure with jagged, color-bar teeth, spiraled eyes, and pawed limbs that stretch across the lower panel. Murakami’s signature smiling flowers and multicolor mushrooms, along with amorphous side characters, crowd the frame. Each character is rendered in thick outlines with neon gradients and surreal detailing, evoking a sensory overload reminiscent of animated psychedelia. The image is whimsical, aggressive, and haunting all at once. Murakami’s visual language here is not soft or cute—it is wild, carnivalesque, and purposefully destabilizing. The figures pulse with the emotional contradictions at the heart of Murakami’s mutated worlds. Takashi Murakami’s ComplexCon Contributions and Skateboard as Canvas ComplexCon has emerged as a global cultural platform that celebrates the fusion of art, fashion, design, and street identity. Murakami’s presence at the 2019 event was marked by the release of this deck set, offering attendees a limited-edition collectible that doubles as a museum-grade art object. Skate decks, often used by artists in the Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork movement, provide a dynamic and culturally loaded format. Their historical role as subcultural canvases aligns with Murakami’s mission to make art both democratic and immersive. By choosing this medium, Murakami continues his practice of challenging distinctions between consumer goods and fine art. The Mutated Deck Set, while printed and collectable, still retains its status as a street-ready object—a symbol of movement, youth rebellion, and visual storytelling. This format allows his work to live not just on gallery walls, but in the hands and homes of people who see culture as fluid and multi-layered. The high-definition printing on natural wood offers vibrant fidelity while keeping the authenticity of material intact. Symbolic Mutation and Emotional Saturation in Contemporary Visual Language Murakami’s use of mutated characters in this piece reflects his fascination with postmodern transformation and emotional overload. The main figure is an amalgamation of innocence and chaos, surrounded by fungal life forms and anthropomorphic flowers. These characters mirror feelings of overstimulation, digital addiction, and pop culture fragmentation. The chaotic layering of elements reflects the graffiti ethos—fill the surface, dominate space, leave a mark that resists being ignored. The work thrives in the tradition of Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork by weaponizing cuteness, twisting it into something primal. The flowers are not gentle—they watch. The colors do not soothe—they shout. This emotional tension becomes a form of cultural resistance, a declaration that art can be dazzling and unsettling at the same time. Murakami’s use of mutation as a recurring theme places his work in direct conversation with street art’s obsession with metamorphosis, identity play, and distortion. Murakami’s Cultural Synthesis and the Evolution of Street Pop Surrealism Takashi Murakami, born in Japan in 1962, continues to influence global visual culture through his multi-disciplinary projects that unify commercial production and philosophical depth. The ComplexCon x Mutated Deck Set is a vivid example of this ongoing work, presenting not only a composition filled with color and chaos but a conceptual artifact that speaks to art’s ability to mutate, like its subject matter. His work brings Japanese folklore, postwar trauma, contemporary media, and urban aesthetics into dialogue through characters that look playful but contain multitudes. This deck set serves as both archive and activation—transforming street materials into collectible visions, uniting fine art clarity with the street's emotional voltage. Murakami’s mutated forms are not deviations—they are evolutions. They represent where Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork is heading: into layered, playful, yet brutally honest expressions of culture’s surreal and saturated now.

    $1,500.00

  • Union Pacific Building America Blotter Paper Archival Print by Lyric One

    Lyric One Union Pacific Building America Blotter Paper Archival Print by Lyric One

    Union Pacific Building America Blotter Paper Archival Print by Lyric One Limited Edition Fine Art Archival Pigment Print Art on Perforated Blotter Paper. 2023 Signed & Numbered Limited Edition of 25 Archival Pigment Print on Perforated Blotter Paper Size: 7.5 x 7.5 Inches Release: April 19, 2023 Limited blotter editions are hand-perforated by Zane Kesey. Perforated blotter paper is a type of paper that is commonly used in the creation of graffiti fine art. This paper is perforated into small squares or tabs, which are then used to create unique artwork prints. The printing process used for blotter paper artwork prints is similar to that of traditional fine art prints, with a focus on using high-quality materials and techniques that ensure the longevity and preservation of the artwork. Archival inks are used to ensure that the print will resist fading and discoloration over time, and acid-free paper is used to prevent deterioration and yellowing. Blotter paper artwork prints are popular among collectors and enthusiasts of graffiti and street art due to their unique texture and the fact that each print is a one-of-a-kind piece of art. They are often framed and displayed in galleries and private collections, and can be a valuable addition to any art collection. Blotter paper artwork prints are made by first creating an original artwork on a sheet of blotter paper using various mediums, the artwork is then scanned or photographed and digitally reproduced using high-quality archival ink and paper. To ensure that these artwork prints are archival quality, it is important to use high-quality materials and techniques in the creation process. This might include using acid-free paper, archival inks, and other materials that will help to preserve the artwork for many years to come. With proper care and storage, these artwork prints can be enjoyed by collectors and enthusiasts for generations to come.

    $360.00

  • Fat Cap Blotter Paper Archival Print by Mike Giant

    Mike Giant Fat Cap Blotter Paper Archival Print by Mike Giant

    Fat Cap Blotter Paper Limited Edition Archival Pigment Print Art on Perforated Blotter Paper by Mike Giant pop culture LSD artwork. Signed Archival Pigment Print on Perforated Blotter Paper Size: 7.5 x 7.5 Inches Release: April 19, 2019 Run of: 50

    $352.00

  • Who Fried Roger Rabbit? Seroquel Blotter Paper Archival Print by Ben Frost

    Ben Frost Who Fried Roger Rabbit? Seroquel Blotter Paper Archival Print by Ben Frost

    Who Fried Roger Rabbit? Seroquel Blotter Paper Archival Print by Ben Frost Limited Edition Fine Art Archival Pigment Print Art on Perforated Blotter Paper. 2025 Signed & Numbered Limited Edition of TBD Archival Pigment Print on Perforated Blotter Paper Size: 7.5 x 7.5 Inches Release: April 19, 2025 Limited blotter editions are hand-perforated by Zane Kesey. Cartoon Madness Meets Pharmaceutical Culture Who Fried Roger Rabbit? Seroquel Blotter Paper Print by Ben Frost reimagines the iconic animated character Roger Rabbit within the framework of modern pharmaceutical branding. Released as part of Frost’s 2025 collection, this 7.5 x 7.5 inch limited edition archival pigment print on perforated blotter paper explores the collision of pop culture and medication packaging with satirical precision. Featuring the animated character smiling manically beside a Seroquel XR layout, the print is hand-perforated by Zane Kesey and produced in a signed and numbered edition. This work critiques how society normalizes mental health struggles through branding and questions how animation, nostalgia, and pharmaceuticals can coexist in a single visual message. Satirical Branding and Medicinal Irony Frost fuses Roger Rabbit’s over-the-top personality with Seroquel, a medication used to treat mood disorders, to amplify the surreal effects of overstimulation and sedation. By transforming the clinical appearance of a pharmaceutical box into a playful, chaotic canvas for a cartoon figure, Frost blurs the line between treatment and escapism. His use of quetiapine packaging language is precise, including dosage information and warnings, yet subverted by Roger Rabbit’s erratic demeanor. The underlying message reflects on how medication is commercialized in a culture that commodifies both mental illness and childhood nostalgia. Material Subversion in Blotter Format The blotter paper format is integral to the conceptual thrust of the piece. Traditionally associated with LSD distribution, blotter prints evoke a psychedelic lineage and hint at an altered perception of reality. By placing a cartoon character on a faux-medication backdrop, Frost disrupts the expectation of serious pharmaceutical design with absurdity. The perforation physically fragments the image, echoing the fragmentation of consciousness and emotion in both medicated and animated experiences. This format enables the artwork to comment simultaneously on drug culture, entertainment media, and mental health marketing. Ben Frost’s Visual Provocation Australian artist Ben Frost has made a name for himself by appropriating advertising, pharmaceutical logos, and mass-market cartoons into biting social commentary. His Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork unpacks consumer psychology through bold color, recognizable imagery, and pointed juxtapositions. Who Fried Roger Rabbit? is a standout example of this method—merging the aesthetics of childhood with the clinical detachment of adult medicalization. Frost confronts viewers with contradictions they may overlook in daily life, drawing humor and tension from the unsettling marriage of cartoon madness and prescribed stability. It’s not just visual stimulation—it’s a question wrapped in a package we’re told to trust.

    $550.00

  • Nocht Lucere Lacuna Blotter Paper Archival Print by Camille Rose Garcia

    Camille Rose Garcia Nocht Lucere Lacuna Blotter Paper Archival Print by Camille Rose Garcia

    Nocht Lucere Lacuna Blotter Paper Limited Edition Archival Pigment Print Art on Perforated Blotter Paper by Camille Rose Garcia pop culture LSD artwork. 2021 Signed & Numbered with COA Archival Pigment Print on Perforated Blotter Paper Artwork Size: 7.5 x 7.5 Inches Release: April 19, 2021. Limited blotter editions are hand-perforated by Zane Kesey. Nocht Lucere Lacuna by Camille Rose Garcia – Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork on Blotter Paper Nocht Lucere Lacuna is a surreal, dreamlike archival pigment print created by Camille Rose Garcia in 2021, presented on hand-perforated blotter paper measuring 7.5 x 7.5 inches. Signed and numbered with an included certificate of authenticity, the artwork was released on April 19, 2021, in collaboration with Zane Kesey, who meticulously perforated each blotter edition. As with all of Garcia’s blotter series, this work transforms a traditionally ephemeral object associated with psychedelic culture into a lasting artifact of visual and cultural critique through the language of street pop art & graffiti artwork. Psychedelic Mythology and Neo-Surrealist Storytelling The composition explodes with chromatic intensity, navigating a fantastical aquatic environment where dream logic reigns. A central figure, reminiscent of a ghostly geisha or mythic siren, rises from a pond blooming with all-seeing eyes and disembodied floral forms. Surrounding her are parades of seahorse riders, aquatic bats, luminescent mushrooms, and mutated birds, all set against a backdrop of cascading neon drips and fluorescent brush textures. The figures are frozen in ceremonial movement, locked within a visual incantation that evokes both ritual and nightmare. Garcia’s intricate layering of translucent hues in magenta, acid green, electric blue, and blood red intensifies the otherworldly atmosphere. Camille Rose Garcia’s Alchemy of Culture and Critique Born in 1970 in California, Camille Rose Garcia’s work blends fairy tale iconography, punk subversion, and ecological decay. Her visual narratives critique consumerism, authoritarianism, and environmental collapse, often through female protagonists navigating hostile dreamworlds. Nocht Lucere Lacuna expands Garcia’s legacy as a street pop art & graffiti artwork visionary, creating a space where fantasy functions as cultural commentary. Her unique ability to collapse dystopia into whimsy continues to resonate across both gallery and countercultural circuits. The Power of Blotter Paper as Pop Object This edition’s format as perforated blotter paper holds deep symbolic weight. Zane Kesey’s involvement ties the piece directly to the history of psychedelic activism and visual protest. By printing on this medium, Garcia amplifies the hallucinogenic potential of her artwork while grounding it in the radical aesthetic traditions of street art and subculture ephemera. The perforations lend the piece a rawness and tactile energy, underscoring its hybrid identity as both collectible art and conceptual object. Nocht Lucere Lacuna operates as a visual invocation—a potent blend of myth, rebellion, and enchantment sealed into one luminous square of paper.

    $352.00

  • Distorted Logo SS20 Skateboard Art Deck by Supreme

    Supreme Distorted Logo SS20 Skateboard Art Deck by Supreme

    Supreme Distorted Logo- SS20 Limited Edition Silkscreen Skateboard deck art by street pop culture artists Supreme.

    $198.00

  • Sweet Dreams Giclee Print by Naoto Hattori

    Naoto Hattori Sweet Dreams Giclee Print by Naoto Hattori

    Sweet Dreams Artwork Giclee Limited Edition Surreal Print on 100% Cotton Rag Fine Art Paper by Pop Culture Graffiti Artist Naoto Hattori. SWEET DREAMS 20 x 24 inches (50.8 x 61 cm) High Quality Giclee Print on 100% Cotton Rag Fine Art Paper Signed and Numbered Edition of 150

    $352.00

  • Miss Piggy On Ozempic Blotter Paper Archival Print by Ben Frost

    Ben Frost Miss Piggy On Ozempic Blotter Paper Archival Print by Ben Frost

    Miss Piggy On Ozempic Blotter Paper Archival Print by Ben Frost Limited Edition Fine Art Archival Pigment Print Art on Perforated Blotter Paper. 2025 Signed & Numbered Limited Edition of TBD Archival Pigment Print on Perforated Blotter Paper Size: 7.5 x 7.5 Inches Release: April 19, 2025 Limited blotter editions are hand-perforated by Zane Kesey. Miss Piggy On Ozempic by Ben Frost: Glamour, Medication, and Street Pop Satire Miss Piggy On Ozempic Blotter Paper Archival Print by Ben Frost, released in 2025, marks another unflinching entry in the artist’s exploration of pharmaceutical aesthetics and iconic pop culture. Printed as a limited edition archival pigment work on perforated blotter paper, this 7.5 x 7.5 inch artwork puts Miss Piggy—arguably the most flamboyant and body-conscious character of the Muppets—at the center of a satirical fusion between celebrity vanity and the contemporary obsession with weight-loss medication. Miss Piggy is rendered in her classic pink glamor with her signature lashes, pearls, and sass, juxtaposed against the stark commercial design of Ozempic packaging. With references to semaglutide, prescription labels, and the inflated price of American healthcare, the work pokes at society’s increasing reliance on aesthetic pharmaceuticals. Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork Meets Medical Consumerism Ben Frost, known for his bold and controversial use of commercial packaging as visual canvas, turns pharmaceutical branding into a narrative device. With Miss Piggy as the character choice, the message becomes sharply ironic. The collision of children’s entertainment with adult insecurities about beauty, size, and control echoes throughout the composition. This piece is not just parody but visual critique, challenging the public’s relationship with health marketed as vanity and the commodification of self-worth. The format of the blotter paper, perforated and collectible, reinforces the idea of medication as a consumable culture artifact—something to be taken, divided, shared, or used for identity shaping. The Role of Feminine Icons in Street Pop Narratives Miss Piggy’s exaggerated femininity and status as a cultural diva are cleverly subverted in this composition. Her character becomes a visual metaphor for the endless pursuit of image perfection. Ben Frost’s work often questions who sets those standards and who profits from them. Here, the packaging of a once-niche diabetes medication now popularly associated with cosmetic weight loss becomes the modern-day pedestal on which icons are propped and critiqued. This collision of corporate design and animated star power builds tension between innocence and commodification, using Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork methods to satirize how quickly culture recycles its idols and issues. Blotter Medium and Psychedelic Provocation Produced in collaboration with Zane Kesey, who hand-perforated the blotter editions, the piece subtly nods to counterculture and the history of mind-altering media. While Ozempic is marketed as a drug for bodily transformation, the print format itself references altered states of awareness. The use of a pop icon like Miss Piggy elevates the print to a statement not just about beauty standards, but about consumption itself—whether it's drugs, fame, or cartoon nostalgia. Miss Piggy On Ozempic is a sharp-edged satire of cultural priorities in an era of performative wellness and image engineering. It is loud, subversive, and unmistakably Frost.

    $550.00

  • Say Goodnight Gracie Blotter Paper Archival Print by Herbie Greene

    Herbie Greene Say Goodnight Gracie Blotter Paper Archival Print by Herbie Greene

    Say Goodnight Gracie Blotter Paper Limited Edition Archival Pigment Print Art on Perforated Blotter Paper by Herbie Greene pop culture LSD artwork. 2021 Signed & Numbered with COA Archival Pigment Print on Perforated Blotter Paper Artwork Size: 7.5 x 7.5 Inches Release: April 19, 2021. Limited blotter editions are hand-perforated by Zane Kesey. Say Goodnight Gracie by Herbie Greene: Blotter Paper Resistance in Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork Say Goodnight Gracie is a 7.5 x 7.5 inch archival pigment print on perforated blotter paper by Herbie Greene, released on April 19, 2021. Signed and numbered with a certificate of authenticity, each piece in this limited edition was hand-perforated by Zane Kesey, reinforcing its symbolic roots in psychedelic counterculture. The print features a black-and-white photograph of Grace Slick, the iconic frontwoman of Jefferson Airplane, overlaid with colorized elements including a paisley red outfit and piercing cyan eyes. The backdrop includes Egyptian-inspired sketches and faded, spray-painted text reading Happy New Year, creating a layered composition that mixes defiance, memory, and cultural critique. Herbie Greene, a legendary photographer from the United States, was known for capturing defining moments of the 1960s San Francisco music scene. This print is more than just a photo—it is a protest embedded in a relic. Slick’s expression and raised middle finger become the central focal point, offering a timeless act of rebellion immortalized through photographic grit and street-inflected style. The surrounding textures—worn concrete, hand-drawn symbols, and fading graffiti—echo the raw surfaces used in Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork, reinforcing the voice of anti-establishment figures who spoke through walls, posters, and sound. Grace Slick, Counterculture, and the Power of Visual Protest The image of Grace Slick in Say Goodnight Gracie resonates deeply with the cultural spirit of the 1960s and its aftermath. Slick's role as a voice of psychedelic rock and protest was unmistakable, and this moment of visual resistance encapsulates that spirit perfectly. She does not perform; she confronts. Her multicolored attire, contrasted against a grayscale background, draws attention to individuality and dissent amidst uniformity and decay. The visual isolation of colorized features within a monotone space mimics the effect of street stenciling or wheatpaste posters, techniques commonly used in urban protest art to highlight voices against a muted backdrop of authority. The print format on blotter paper is significant. It bridges the documentation of music history with the tangible aesthetics of drug culture and underground art. Zane Kesey’s involvement in hand-perforating the editions ties this piece directly to the visual traditions of LSD blotter art, where iconography often merged political satire, celebrity, and surrealism. This connection reinforces the idea of art not just as commentary, but as a vehicle of transformation—mental, social, and spiritual. The Urban Palimpsest as Art Form Herbie Greene’s composition in Say Goodnight Gracie operates like an urban palimpsest. Layers of history, rebellion, femininity, and symbolism are built into every detail. The hieroglyph-like drawings add an archaeological tone, suggesting lost messages or forgotten rituals that still echo in the present. The crumbling wall texture and ghosted graffiti add urgency and vulnerability, as if the image could fade at any moment—just like the posters pasted on city walls, fleeting yet unforgettable. This quality is central to Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork, where temporality, public visibility, and emotion collide to create impact. Grace Slick’s raised hand and unflinching gaze are a signal, not just a pose. They challenge the viewer to consider where protest lives today. In Greene’s composition, the past is not frozen but reanimated on blotter paper, a medium that has transported minds beyond the visible world for decades. This visual dialogue between photography, protest, and psychedelic symbolism speaks not just to nostalgia but to the ongoing role of image as resistance. Herbie Greene and the Documentation of Rebellion Herbie Greene’s work captures moments that transcend the frame. By reissuing Say Goodnight Gracie on perforated blotter paper, he transforms documentation into object, memory into statement, and portrait into symbol. This choice elevates the piece beyond archival photography into the arena of Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork, where message and method matter equally. Greene, born in the United States, became known for his close work with artists like Jefferson Airplane, the Grateful Dead, and Janis Joplin. His lens documented a generation seeking transformation, and in this work, that spirit persists—vivid, fierce, and permanent on a medium built for moments that change everything. Say Goodnight Gracie is not just a tribute to a music icon. It is a distilled act of visual rebellion, sharpened by decades of cultural memory and executed on one of the most subversive print surfaces in art history. It offers a flash of resistance captured in time, formatted for the hand, the wall, and the mind alike.

    $631.00

  • Worlds Collide Silkscreen Print by Lefty Out There x Louis De Guzman

    Lefty Out There Worlds Collide Silkscreen Print by Lefty Out There x Louis De Guzman

    Worlds Collide Limited Edition 2-Color Split FOuntain Hand-Pulled Silkscreen Print on Recycled Archival Black French Paper by Lefty Out There x Louis De Guzman Graffiti Street Artist Modern Pop Art. 2020 Signed By Both Artists & Numbered Limited Edition of 10 Artwork Size 36x24 Silkscreen Abstraction Immerse yourself in the vibrancy of the urban art scene with the extraordinary piece titled "Worlds Collide." This limited edition silkscreen print is a creative collaboration between renowned graffiti street artists Lefty Out There and Louis De Guzman, known for their pioneering contributions to the modern pop art movement. Rendered in a compelling 2-color split, the artwork showcases their unique blending of abstraction and graffiti, a testament to their innovative styles. "Worlds Collide" was meticulously crafted in 2020, with each artist personally signing each piece, infusing their essence and commitment into the work. As a limited edition of only ten prints, this is an exclusive opportunity to own a piece of pop art history. The 36x24 artwork exudes a stunningly large presence, making it a significant statement piece for any collection or display. The artists have chosen the hand-pulled silkscreen print method for this artwork, an esteemed traditional process that allows for a vibrant color payoff and detailed precision. The print is produced on recycled archival black French paper, further enhancing the richness of the colors while also embracing an eco-friendly approach. The result is a stunningly bold, visually arresting piece that is not only beautiful but also sustainable. The intertwining of graffiti street art and modern pop art in "Worlds Collide" reflects the artistic evolution of the urban art scene. Lefty Out There and Louis De Guzman have masterfully embraced the fluidity and dynamism of graffiti art and transformed it into a form of modern pop art that carries a potent commentary on contemporary society. This remarkable limited edition print offers a rare glimpse into their creative minds and the evolution of street art, making it a coveted piece for collectors and admirers of these groundbreaking artists. It represents a stunning intersection of color, form, and creativity that epitomizes the spirit of modern pop art.

    $962.00

  • Sale -15% Mr Dob B Art Toy Sculpture by Takashi Murakami TM/KK

    Takashi Murakami TM/KK Mr Dob B Art Toy Sculpture by Takashi Murakami TM/KK

    Mr Dob B Limited Edition Vinyl Art Sculpture Collectible Artwork by Japanese Pop Culture Artist Takashi Murakami TM/KK x BAIT. 2017 Limited Edition of 800 Complexcon x BAITx Takashi Murakami 9x12x8 Perfect Like New Displayed With Box. Mr. Dob B Vinyl Sculpture by Takashi Murakami: Multicolor Chaos in Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork Mr. Dob B is a 2017 limited edition vinyl art sculpture by Japanese artist Takashi Murakami, created in collaboration with BAIT and released during ComplexCon in a run of 800 pieces. Measuring approximately 9x12x8 inches, the piece features Murakami’s signature character Mr. Dob, a hybrid creation that combines mouse-like ears with a psychedelic, manic expression and vibrant color scheme. Presented in a sculptural format with a fully illustrated collector’s box, the figure exemplifies Murakami’s ability to translate two-dimensional visual chaos into tactile three-dimensional form. The piece embodies a convergence of Japanese superflat aesthetics, otaku subculture, and fine art sculpture, aligning closely with the language and impact of Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork. Design, Dimension, and Character Evolution Mr. Dob B is one of the most striking physical manifestations of Murakami’s universe, with the figure’s open jaw revealing an internal vortex of teeth, tongues, rainbows, and spikes. The swirling eyes, exaggerated facial features, and tentacle-like limbs transform the figure into an optical spectacle that defies traditional character design. Built in high-gloss vinyl with a candy-like finish, the sculpture holds presence and reflects light like a futuristic idol. Murakami’s layering of pop references, Japanese animation cues, and commercial color schemes results in a form that feels both celebratory and confrontational. This version of Mr. Dob functions as a physical distillation of the visual overload often seen in Murakami’s paintings and murals. It is a figure both familiar and terrifying, comical and aggressive, simultaneously referencing kawaii culture and subverting it. Takashi Murakami’s Influence on Pop-Driven Collectible Sculpture Takashi Murakami, born in Japan in 1962, is widely recognized as a central figure in contemporary pop-infused fine art. His work blurs distinctions between high culture and consumerism, integrating anime, fashion, and graffiti into museum-level exhibitions and commercial collaborations. Mr. Dob, introduced in the mid-1990s, has become one of Murakami’s most recognizable motifs—part mascot, part avatar, part marketing critique. In the context of Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork, Murakami’s vinyl sculptures function as icons of consumer subversion. They are designed to be collected, displayed, and celebrated, yet they contain within them the coded languages of branding, art history, and digital culture. With the release of Mr. Dob B at ComplexCon—a marketplace event known for its intersection of streetwear, art, and hype—Murakami further positioned the sculpture as an emblem of culture remix and high-art accessibility. Limited Edition Vinyl as a Pop-Cultural Time Capsule The 2017 Mr. Dob B edition is packaged in a large format, fully printed box that mirrors the chaotic aesthetic of the figure inside. Each sculpture is factory-finished to perfection, with clean paint applications and balanced form, echoing the commercial polish of designer toy culture. Yet unlike mass-market collectibles, this figure is part of a limited edition, marking its exclusivity and artistic integrity. Murakami’s presence at ComplexCon signaled a shift—where fine art not only entered the hype arena but became central to it. In Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork, this edition stands as a time capsule of visual culture—playful, precise, and entirely aware of its impact. Mr. Dob B is not merely a sculpture but a statement about saturation, spectacle, and the evolving definition of art in a media-drenched world.

    $3,645.00 $3,098.00

  • Love Tripping- Pink Blotter Paper Archival Pigment Print by Mr André Saraiva

    Mr André Saraiva Love Tripping- Pink Blotter Paper Archival Pigment Print by Mr André Saraiva

    Love Tripping- Pink Limited Edition Fine Art Blotter Paper Archival Pigment Print Art on Perforated Blotter Paper by Modern Pop Artist Mr Andre. Archival Pigment Print on Perforated Blotter Paper Size: 7.5 x 7.5 Inches Release: April 19, 2022 Limited blotter editions are hand-perforated by Zane Kesey.

    $450.00

  • Springfield Blotter Paper Archival Print by Sheefy McFly- Tashif Turner

    Sheefy McFly- Tashif Turner Springfield Blotter Paper Archival Print by Sheefy McFly- Tashif Turner

    Springfield Limited Edition Fine Art Blotter Paper Archival Pigment Print Art on Perforated Blotter Paper by Modern Pop Artist Sheefy McFly- Tashif Turner. 2022 Signed & Numbered Limited Edition of 50 Archival Pigment Print on Perforated Blotter Paper Size: 7.5 x 7.5 Inches Release: April 19, 2022 Limited blotter editions are hand-perforated by Zane Kesey.

    $352.00

  • Strange Romance Blotter Paper Archival Print by Denial- Daniel Bombardier

    Denial- Daniel Bombardier Strange Romance Blotter Paper Archival Print by Denial- Daniel Bombardier

    Strange Romance Blotter Paper Archival Print by Denial- Daniel Bombardier Limited Edition Fine Art Archival Pigment Print Art on Perforated Blotter Paper. 2023 Signed & Numbered Limited Edition of 25 Archival Pigment Print on Perforated Blotter Paper Size: 7.5 x 7.5 Inches Release: April 19, 2023 Limited blotter editions are hand-perforated by Zane Kesey. Perforated blotter paper is a type of paper that is commonly used in the creation of graffiti fine art. This paper is perforated into small squares or tabs, which are then used to create unique artwork prints. The printing process used for blotter paper artwork prints is similar to that of traditional fine art prints, with a focus on using high-quality materials and techniques that ensure the longevity and preservation of the artwork. Archival inks are used to ensure that the print will resist fading and discoloration over time, and acid-free paper is used to prevent deterioration and yellowing. Blotter paper artwork prints are popular among collectors and enthusiasts of graffiti and street art due to their unique texture and the fact that each print is a one-of-a-kind piece of art. They are often framed and displayed in galleries and private collections, and can be a valuable addition to any art collection. Blotter paper artwork prints are made by first creating an original artwork on a sheet of blotter paper using various mediums, the artwork is then scanned or photographed and digitally reproduced using high-quality archival ink and paper. To ensure that these artwork prints are archival quality, it is important to use high-quality materials and techniques in the creation process. This might include using acid-free paper, archival inks, and other materials that will help to preserve the artwork for many years to come. With proper care and storage, these artwork prints can be enjoyed by collectors and enthusiasts for generations to come.

    $467.00

  • Happy Helmet Blotter Paper Archival Print by Ben Frost

    Ben Frost Happy Helmet Blotter Paper Archival Print by Ben Frost

    Happy Helmet Blotter Paper Limited Edition Archival Pigment Print Art on Perforated Blotter Paper by Ben Frost pop culture LSD artwork. Archival Pigment Print on Perforated Blotter Paper Size: 7.5 x 7.5 Inches Release: April 19, 2021 Limited blotter editions are hand-perforated by Zane Kesey & may vary slightly from the example shown. Currently exhibits locally and internationally, while his work has been presented in multiple exhibitions in the USA, Europe, and Asia. One of the first things that one notices in the art of Frost is the unconventional media and means, from traditional square-shaped canvas to cardboard boxes and from acrylic paint to aerosol spray. It is not random that a great portion of his art consists of appropriated imagery of animations, just like the Simpsons, Looney Tunes, Smurfs, Winnie the Pooh, etc., which are placed into a new artistic context, without losing their original connotations.

    $572.00

  • Fire Blotter Paper Archival Print by Joe Mangrum

    Joe Mangrum Fire Blotter Paper Archival Print by Joe Mangrum

    Fire Blotter Paper Limited Edition Archival Pigment Print Art on Perforated Blotter Paper by Joe Mangrum pop culture LSD artwork. Archival Pigment Print on Perforated Blotter Paper Size: 7.5 x 7.5 Inches Release: April 19, 2021 Limited blotter editions are hand-perforated by Zane Kesey & may vary slightly from the example shown.

    $352.00

  • Sale -15% Groovy MC Supersized Art Toy by Ron English- POPaganda

    Ron English- POPaganda Groovy MC Supersized Art Toy by Ron English- POPaganda

    Groovy MC Supersized Grin Limited Edition Vinyl Art Toy McSupersized Collectible Artwork by street graffiti artist Ron English- POPaganda. 2020 Signed New In Box Limited Edition. Groovy Variant Colorway. Ron English- POPaganda, 8 Inches Tall, Signed By Ron English- POPaganda, SFBI

    $283.00 $241.00

  • LSD Afterschool Special Blotter Paper Archival Print by Have A Good Trip

    Have A Good Trip LSD Afterschool Special Blotter Paper Archival Print by Have A Good Trip

    LSD Afterschool Special Blotter Paper Limited Edition Archival Pigment Print Art on Perforated Blotter Paper by Have A Good Trip pop culture LSD artwork. Archival Pigment Print on Perforated Blotter Paper Size: 7.5 x 7.5 Inches Release: April 19, 2021 Limited blotter editions are hand-perforated by Zane Kesey & may vary slightly from the example shown.

    $352.00

  • Palm Tree Blotter Paper Archival Print by Mike Giant

    Mike Giant Palm Tree Blotter Paper Archival Print by Mike Giant

    Palm Tree Limited Edition Fine Art Blotter Paper Archival Pigment Print Art on Perforated Blotter Paper by Modern Artist Mike Giant. 2020 Signed & Numbered Limited Edition of 50 Archival Pigment Print on Perforated Blotter Paper Size: 7.5 x 7.5 Inches Release: September 12th, 2020 Limited blotter editions are hand-perforated by Zane Kesey.

    $352.00

  • Late Night Study II Original Drawing by Sheefy McFly- Tashif Turner

    Sheefy McFly- Tashif Turner Late Night Study II Original Drawing by Sheefy McFly- Tashif Turner

    Late Night Study II Original Ink Hand Drawing on Fine Art Paper by modern trending street art artist Sheefy McFly. 2020 Signed Original Marker Drawing Artwork Size 18x24 Framed Late Night Study II, 2020 Ink on paper 24 x 18 inches (61 x 45.7 cm) (sheet) Signed and dated along right edge. Framed Dimensions 27.5 X 21.5 Inches

    $1,311.00

  • Space Hand Blotter Paper Archival Print by Bunnie Reiss

    Bunnie Reiss Space Hand Blotter Paper Archival Print by Bunnie Reiss

    Space Hand Blotter Paper Limited Edition Archival Pigment Print Art on Perforated Blotter Paper by Bunnie Reiss pop culture LSD artwork. Archival Pigment Print on Perforated Blotter Paper Size: 7.5 x 7.5 Inches Release: April 19, 2021 Limited blotter editions are hand-perforated by Zane Kesey & may vary slightly from the example shown.

    $352.00

  • Sueño de Día en El Desierto de Cactus Giclee Print by Alexis Mata

    Alexis Mata Sueño de Día en El Desierto de Cactus Giclee Print by Alexis Mata

    Sueño de Día en El Desierto de Cactus Giclee Print by Alexis Mata Daydream in the Cactus Desert Artwork Limited Edition Print on Hahnemühle Fine Art Paper Graffiti Pop Street Artist. 2025 Signed & Numbered Limited Edition of 50 Artwork Size 27.5x39.3 Sueño de Día en El Desierto de Cactus by Alexis Mata: Surreal Fragmentation in Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork Sueño de Día en El Desierto de Cactus is a 2025 limited edition giclée print by Mexican artist Alexis Mata, widely recognized under the name Ciler. This signed and numbered edition of 50, printed on Hahnemühle fine art paper and measuring 27.5 x 39.3 inches, reflects Mata’s ongoing exploration of fragmentation, surrealism, and visual distortion within the context of Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork. The image is a dreamlike desert landscape drenched in golden sunlight, where natural beauty is digitally unraveled. In the midst of this vast terrain of cactus and color, Mata disrupts the illusion with vertical glitch-like distortions that slice through the scenery, turning cacti, shadows, and flora into stretched chromatic bands. The peaceful warmth of the desert is pulled apart, reassembled in skewed data-like structures, reflecting a visual language that speaks equally to nature and code. The top portion of the composition presents a cinematic vision of a glowing desert sun suspended in a sky of volatile, painterly clouds. Jagged rock formations and mesas rise in the distance like totems. Yet beneath this traditional beauty, Mata introduces a digital intervention that fractures the organic flow. The middle and lower halves of the work are invaded by thick, vertical pixel drags—like the desert is melting through corrupted memory. Cactus forms and flowering succulents are caught mid-glitch, their textures pulled downward in colored bands. This contrast between smooth, atmospheric painting and mechanical disruption defines the emotional structure of the piece. Symbolic Terrain and Digital Manipulation in Ciler’s Visual Practice Alexis Mata’s approach to landscape is both reverent and confrontational. By introducing digital disintegration into an otherwise idyllic desert, he reminds viewers that memory, history, and land are not fixed. The artwork’s glitches are not flaws—they are intentional ruptures in perception. The desert, often romanticized as still and eternal, becomes unstable and morphing. These distortions mirror the influence of media saturation, environmental exploitation, and emotional fragmentation. Mata turns the terrain into both a physical and psychological map, where natural beauty coexists with collapse. This strategy aligns with the sensibility of Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork, which often reclaims imagery and injects urban energy into spaces of tradition. Mata’s piece disrupts the expectations of landscape art by applying techniques derived from the visual language of error—compression artifacts, pixel drag, color interference. The result is a visual push-and-pull between harmony and chaos. The sun still burns above, but the ground no longer obeys gravity or realism. The desert is awake, but its dream is unstable. Alexis Mata and the Evolution of Landscape in Street Pop Art Mata has long operated within the territories of collage, urban decay, and symbolic erasure. While his earlier work often focused on portraiture and politically charged disruptions of identity, Sueño de Día en El Desierto de Cactus marks a shift in subject while preserving his core approach. The cactus desert becomes a new surface for resistance. By reinterpreting the land through digital breakdown, Mata questions authenticity, memory, and permanence. It is not destruction for its own sake, but a reflection of contemporary instability—where even nature is glitched by systemic pressure. The tension in the work is beautifully managed. The distortion never fully overwhelms the landscape, but neither does the desert escape unscathed. Mata balances painterly craft with modern interference, capturing the moment when tradition gives way to transformation. The giclée format ensures that every brushstroke and digital fracture is preserved in high resolution, emphasizing texture, hue, and depth across the printed surface. Each piece in the edition is a precise and immersive artifact of this visual narrative. Sueño de Día en El Desierto de Cactus as Emotional Terrain and Cultural Signal This work functions not only as an aesthetic experiment but as a meditative disruption. Sueño de Día en El Desierto de Cactus turns the desert into a symbol of contested memory, where natural forms are encoded with meaning and then partially corrupted. Alexis Mata does not simply present beauty—he investigates it, challenges its endurance, and repositions it within the language of graffiti, digital manipulation, and conceptual resistance. As part of the growing movement within Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork, this print expands what landscape can mean in the age of distortion. It acknowledges nostalgia while confronting digital decay. The desert becomes a mirror for emotional fragmentation, its surface caught in the middle of loading, collapsing, or transforming into something new. Mata’s work reminds us that beauty is not immune to interference—and that dreams, even in daylight, are never completely stable.

    $1,200.00

  • Abstract Abstraction Green Original Oil Painting by Samuel Kamen

    Samuel Kamen Abstract Abstraction Green Original Oil Painting by Samuel Kamen

    Abstract Abstraction Green Original One of a Kind Oil Painting Artwork on Cardboard by Post Modern Artist Samuel Kamen. 20th Century 10.5x14 Signed Original

    $751.00

  • Where Is My Mind? Blotter Paper Archival Print by Richey Beckett

    Richey Beckett Where Is My Mind? Blotter Paper Archival Print by Richey Beckett

    Where Is My Mind? Blotter Paper Limited Edition Archival Pigment Print Art on Perforated Blotter Paper by Richey Beckett pop culture LSD artwork. 2021 Signed & Numbered with COA Archival Pigment Print on Perforated Blotter Paper Artwork Size: 7.5 x 7.5 Inches Release: April 19, 2021. Limited blotter editions are hand-perforated by Zane Kesey. Where Is My Mind? by Richey Beckett: Blotter Paper Art and the Psychedelic Thread in Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork Where Is My Mind? is a 7.5 x 7.5 inch archival pigment print on perforated blotter paper released on April 19, 2021, by Welsh illustrator Richey Beckett. This limited edition artwork was signed, numbered, and accompanied by a certificate of authenticity. Hand-perforated by Zane Kesey, son of Ken Kesey and steward of a cultural lineage intertwined with psychedelic exploration, this edition pays homage to a rich visual and countercultural history. Through Beckett’s meticulous ink work and symbolic imagery, the piece situates itself as a vital contribution to the evolution of Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork. The artwork’s composition centers on the serene face of a woman, surrounded by flowing hair and ornamental floral details, rendered with a delicate balance of hallucinogenic color and fine linework. The blend of purples, reds, greens, and gold evokes the mind-altered visual field of psychedelic experience. The choice to print on blotter paper ties directly to the cultural tradition of LSD distribution art, connecting this work not only to the underground 1960s art scene but to a broader rebellion against aesthetic and political norms. Beckett’s signature precision and reverence for ancient motifs lend this piece a sacred quality while simultaneously celebrating chaos, dream states, and emotional openness. Visual Storytelling Rooted in Psychedelic Print Culture Where Is My Mind? reflects Beckett’s ability to fuse visual elegance with symbolic resonance. The closed eyes and tranquil expression of the central figure suggest a journey inward, a disconnection from physicality, and an immersion into a psychological or metaphysical space. This moment of quiet dissolution mirrors the experience associated with psychedelic substances and their ability to distort or amplify human perception. By printing the piece on blotter paper, Beckett reactivates a format that has long served both as a functional delivery system for LSD and as an art form intended to transport the viewer. In doing so, he contributes to the preservation and reinterpretation of a visual language often excluded from traditional art history but foundational to the aesthetics of Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork. This piece extends far beyond the visual. Its medium invites viewers to remember or imagine the tactile and spiritual act of transformation. Just as graffiti transforms neglected architecture into message boards for cultural dissent, blotter paper transforms a temporary substance into a permanent artifact. Beckett’s work, while refined and intricate, carries that same ethos of transformation and confrontation. Symbolic Density and Format as Rebellion The symbolism in Where Is My Mind? is multi-layered. The relaxed figure appears almost weightless, floating in a tapestry of organic forms and golden bursts. These decorative flourishes suggest botanical symbolism, possibly referencing the natural origins of psychedelics and their ceremonial use in ancient cultures. The decision to create such a detailed and meditative composition on blotter paper is both a reverent act and a subversive one. It elevates a disposable, outlawed item into the fine art conversation without sanitizing its roots. Like much of Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork, the work embraces duality—between control and release, structure and chaos, tradition and defiance. Where Is My Mind? uses ink, color, and medium to reframe the act of viewing into something akin to experience. The work is not passive. It demands that viewers slow down, examine detail, and reflect. In a world of mass-produced imagery and digital distraction, Beckett offers something tactile and intentional. It is this focus that resonates so deeply with collectors, fans of psych art, and advocates of art forms that exist outside of academic permission. Richey Beckett’s Influence on Contemporary Psychedelic Street Pop Art Richey Beckett, based in South Wales, continues to shape the visual direction of countercultural art by merging classical pen and ink craftsmanship with formats and themes that challenge conventional art norms. His work in blotter paper editions—especially this 2021 release—is a clear example of how Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork has matured while maintaining its radical edge. These limited pieces operate on multiple levels: as high-end collector items, as cultural preservation tools, and as meditative visual narratives. The collaboration with Zane Kesey deepens the cultural significance of the work, grounding it in a legacy that spans decades of visual resistance and expanded consciousness. Where Is My Mind? reminds viewers that the boundaries of art are not dictated by canvas or gallery walls, but by intention, format, and emotional resonance. Beckett’s blotter paper pieces stand as living testaments to a time-honored artistic rebellion made modern through craft, color, and consciousness.

    $352.00

  • Noche Blotter Paper Archival Print by El Pez

    El Pez Noche Blotter Paper Archival Print by El Pez

    Noche Blotter Paper Limited Edition Archival Pigment Print Art on Perforated Blotter Paper by Pez pop culture LSD artwork. Archival Pigment Print on Perforated Blotter Paper Size: 7.5 x 7.5 Inches Release: April 19, 2021 Limited blotter editions are hand-perforated by Zane Kesey & may vary slightly from the example shown.

    $352.00

  • Let Go Blotter Paper Archival Print by Slegh

    Slegh Let Go Blotter Paper Archival Print by Slegh

    Let Go Blotter Paper Limited Edition Archival Pigment Print Art on Perforated Blotter Paper by Slegh pop culture LSD artwork. Archival Pigment Print on Perforated Blotter Paper Size: 7.5 x 7.5 Inches Release: April 19, 2021 These limited blotter editions are hand-perforated by Zane Kesey. The alignment of the perforations over the artwork may vary slightly from the example shown.

    $352.00

  • Hiatus Kaiyote Feral Feelings Blotter Paper Archival Print by Lauren YS

    Lauren YS Hiatus Kaiyote Feral Feelings Blotter Paper Archival Print by Lauren YS

    Hiatus Kaiyote Feral Feelings Blotter Paper Limited Edition Archival Pigment Print Art on Perforated Blotter Paper by Lauren YS pop culture LSD artwork. 2021 Signed & Numbered with COA Archival Pigment Print on Perforated Blotter Paper Artwork Size: 7.5 x 7.5 Inches Release: April 19, 2021. Limited blotter editions are hand-perforated by Zane Kesey. Hiatus Kaiyote Feral Feelings by Lauren YS: Wild Psychedelia in Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork Hiatus Kaiyote Feral Feelings is a 7.5 x 7.5 inch archival pigment print on perforated blotter paper created by American visual artist Lauren YS. Released on April 19, 2021, this limited edition was signed, numbered, and issued with a certificate of authenticity. Each sheet was hand-perforated by Zane Kesey, continuing the cultural tradition of using blotter paper not just as a medium for LSD but as a unique canvas for radical visual expression. With its vibrant color palette, exaggerated features, and chaotic emotional energy, Feral Feelings stands as a high-intensity contribution to the canon of Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork, channeling music, myth, and modern psychedelia through explosive design. At the center of the piece is a creature that merges human, animal, and alien features into a snarling, wildly expressive face. This character is framed by bold lettering that spells Hiatus Kaiyote, paying tribute to the experimental Australian music group known for genre-defying sounds and raw vocal presence. The character’s bulging eyes, forked tongue, and feral grin radiate untamed emotion and energy, while its teal and magenta skin tones clash and swirl against the trippy lime-yellow backdrop. The overall visual effect is an intentional overload — a full-spectrum flood of personality, power, and surreal transformation. Lauren YS and the Psychedelic Mutation of Identity Lauren YS is known for creating surreal characters that explore hybridity, gender play, and personal mythology. In Feral Feelings, they transform the human face into a multidimensional being that feels pulled from dreamspace and folklore. This creature seems to scream and laugh at once, with hands clutching its face in a pose that blurs ecstasy with instability. The styling reflects a visual language rooted in comic books, tattoo culture, and psych art, but refracted through a lens of queer symbolism and contemporary rebellion. The blotter format adds physical intimacy to the piece, encouraging tactile interaction and inviting contemplation of its connection to expanded perception and psychedelic experience. Feral Feelings captures a raw emotional state that aligns with the sonic aesthetic of Hiatus Kaiyote — urgent, layered, and genreless. Lauren YS translates that sound into form, using distortion and color not only for style but for psychological impact. The high-contrast design mimics the visual effects of hallucinogens, making the print feel alive in its chaotic motion. Every element — from the extended fangs to the hypnotic background — serves to amplify the creature’s volatility, creating a representation of unfiltered inner states. Blotter Paper as Medium and Message in Contemporary Psychedelic Art The choice of perforated blotter paper is foundational to the print’s conceptual depth. Historically used as the primary method for distributing LSD, blotter paper became an underground icon for free expression, spiritual risk, and visual experimentation. By using this format for an archival pigment print, Lauren YS taps into a lineage of rebellious creativity and spiritual inquiry. Zane Kesey’s hand-perforation of the sheets connects the piece to a direct family legacy of countercultural innovation, bridging generational movements through shared materials and symbolic intent. Feral Feelings does not imitate vintage blotter art — it redefines it. It embodies the spirit of Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork through aggressive color, mutant portraiture, and mythic typography. It belongs to walls and personal shrines alike. The idea that a traditionally disposable material can house high art further disrupts distinctions between commercial, spiritual, and fine art domains. That sense of disruption and transformation is central to both street art and psychedelic traditions. The Emotional Core of Mutation in Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork At its core, Feral Feelings is about emotional mutation. It visualizes that exact moment when internal intensity explodes into external reality. Through the use of hybrid characters, bold linework, and color saturation, Lauren YS gives form to instinctual emotion and psychic disarray. This theme runs deep in both graffiti and pop surrealism, where the human body and psyche are often bent, stretched, or mutated into new symbolic forms. The snarling face in Feral Feelings is not a monster, but a mirror — exaggerated to express what words cannot. Lauren YS’s work continues to reshape the boundaries of psychedelic street pop culture by reinterpreting traditional formats with fearless creativity and cultural fluency. Feral Feelings stands as a beacon of that energy — unfiltered, loud, irreverent, and transcendent. It represents what happens when sound, identity, and visual intensity collide on a sheet of perforated paper and erupt into full color.

    $352.00

  • Night Time Manila Yellow Silkscreen Print by Dalek- James Marshall

    Dalek- James Marshall Night Time Manila Yellow Silkscreen Print by Dalek- James Marshall

    Night Time Manila Yellow Silkscreen Print by Dalek- James Marshall Hand-Pulled 14-Color on French Manila Yellow Kraft Cardstock Paper Limited Edition Artwork. 2023 Signed & Numbered Limited Edition of 15 Artwork Size 18x24 Silkscreen Print Night Time Manila Yellow Edition Night Time Manila Yellow Silkscreen Print by Dalek – James Marshall James Marshall, known in the art world as Dalek, brings his unmistakable aesthetic into radiant focus with the 2023 silkscreen edition “Night Time Manila Yellow.” This limited release, printed on French Manila Yellow Kraft cardstock, measures 18x24 inches and is restricted to a rare edition of only 15. Each hand-pulled screen print uses 14 carefully layered colors to construct an explosive and hypnotic composition that is as precise as it is playful. The print is signed and numbered by the artist, anchoring its place in the collector-driven Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork universe. Mechanized Play and Surreal Symbolism Dalek’s signature Space Monkey figures remain central to this print, yet here they multiply and entangle in a world of robotic mechanisms, riotous shapes, and layered structures. “Night Time Manila Yellow” feels like a visual symphony of saturation, with teal, fuchsia, neon yellow, and black elements collapsing into one another across a dreamlike grid. The figures wield mallets, spears, and geometric props, each one seemingly locked into an urgent task. This sense of choreography and visual automation transforms the print into more than a character study—it's an elaborate stage of organized chaos, one that balances between subconscious memory and futuristic design. Precision in Color and Structure The richness of this 14-color silkscreen process gives the artwork a luminous depth and tactile presence. Dalek’s use of French Manila Yellow cardstock as the paper base imbues the piece with a warmer, vintage sensibility—subtly grounding the neon, cartoon-drenched chaos that dominates the surface. The meticulous layering of color demonstrates Dalek’s technical discipline as well as his commitment to producing high-fidelity editions. Bold curves, repeating circular motifs, and structured overlaps give the artwork a sense of mechanical rhythm, echoing visual strategies seen in Op Art and Constructivism, but reimagined through a Street Pop Art lens. Color Theory Meets Urban Noise “Night Time Manila Yellow” stands as a contemporary artifact of street culture’s evolution into collectible fine art. Dalek’s work is deeply rooted in his early exposure to graffiti and punk iconography, yet here, his visual language has matured into complex architectural compositions. The use of saturation, repetition, and robotic characters reflects a commentary on technology, identity, and consumption, though without didacticism. The viewer is left to interpret the orchestration of symbols on their own terms. The balance between childlike excitement and structured precision makes this piece a compelling addition to Dalek’s growing body of highly sought-after silkscreen editions. With its rare edition count, rich color layering, and frenetic design, “Night Time Manila Yellow” is a defining example of modern screen printing intersecting with visual rebellion. It is a print that demands attention and invites exploration—a layered map of energy, control, and disintegration in full color.

    $347.00

  • McTripping Blotter Paper Archival Print by Ron English- POPaganda

    Ron English- POPaganda McTripping Blotter Paper Archival Print by Ron English- POPaganda

    McTripping Blotter Paper Limited Edition Archival Pigment Print Art on Perforated Blotter Paper by Ron English- POPaganda pop culture LSD artwork. Archival Pigment Print on Perforated Blotter Paper Size: 7.5 x 7.5 Inches Release: April 19, 2021 Limited blotter editions are hand-perforated by Zane Kesey & may vary slightly from the example shown.

    $529.00

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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