Varnish Finish
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Denial- Daniel Bombardier Decycled Versace HPM Archival Print by Denial- Daniel Bombardier
Decycled Versace Limited Edition Hand-Embellished HPM Archival Pigment Prints with Collage, Aerosol, Pencil, and Varnish Embellishments on Fine Art Paper by Denial Graffiti Street Artist Modern Pop Art. 2021 Signed Limited Edition Numbered & Custom Framed Archival Pigment Print with Collage, Aerosol, Pencil, and Varnish Embellishments Size: 17.8125 x 23.75 Inches Release: December 09, 2021 Run of: 15 Denial’s Decycled Versace: The Medicine of Branding in Contemporary Street Pop Art Denial’s Decycled Versace, released in 2021 as a hand-embellished archival pigment print, continues the artist’s sharp interrogation of brand worship, identity construction, and the seductive aesthetics of consumerism. Each edition in this 15-print run measures 17.8125 by 23.75 inches, uniquely altered with collage, aerosol, pencil, and varnish layers. Centered within a baroque gold frame, the work features a large, stylized capsule—branded with the iconic Versace Medusa head—set against a background of jagged patterns and fractured color fields. The capsule is marked 100MG, reinforcing its identity as both visual object and conceptual drug. Denial, also known as Daniel Bombardier, uses the pill as a central form throughout his Decycled series to comment on the addictive nature of status and the role luxury logos play in modern identity. By embedding the Versace logo inside the capsule, the work equates brand consumption with self-medication. The gesture is neither glorification nor condemnation—it is exposure. The logo becomes an ingredient, the dosage carefully calculated to deliver an emotional or social high. In this way, Decycled Versace critiques not only the brand but the cultural systems that elevate such symbols to near-mythological status. Visual Noise and Symbolic Disruption The background of Decycled Versace is composed of sharp diagonal slices, splatter textures, halftone fields, and expressive spray lines. These elements reference both traditional graffiti techniques and digital design aesthetics. The layering creates visual tension that denies stillness or easy resolution. Against this chaotic backdrop, the sleek and glowing pill shape appears almost sterile in contrast. The effect is disorienting but intentional—luxury, the work seems to suggest, thrives when placed above the messiness it claims to erase. The Medusa head, a long-standing Versace emblem tied to Greek mythology and themes of desire and danger, is reclaimed here as an icon of consumer hypnosis. Placed inside the pill, it becomes an object of internalization. Denial’s use of halftones and rough stenciling techniques further destabilizes the polished aura of the brand, reminding viewers that behind every clean logo is a constructed illusion. In the context of Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork, the work reclaims visual space from marketing systems and redistributes it as artistic critique. The Framed Illusion of Power and Permanence The ornate gold frame surrounding Decycled Versace plays a critical role in the piece’s messaging. Traditionally associated with classical portraiture and gallery sanctity, the frame lends artificial authority to the artwork. But that reverence is undercut by the content inside—messy, chaotic, ruptured. The pill format, designed to look sleek and scientific, floats inside this field like a sacred relic. The dissonance between material refinement and conceptual rebellion is where the piece gains its weight. Denial’s manipulation of the fine art object mirrors the dual lives of luxury brands, which often straddle the lines between exclusivity and mass visibility. Decycled Versace exists as both critique and artifact of the very system it exposes. By transforming brand logos into medicinal metaphors, Denial forces a reevaluation of how identity is consumed, and how branding operates as both symptom and cure in modern culture. Within the language of Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork, this piece functions not just as commentary but as a dose of visual clarity in a culture addicted to image.
$2,500.00
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Denial- Daniel Bombardier Decycled Coach HPM Archival Print by Denial- Daniel Bombardier
Decycled Coach Limited Edition Hand-Embellished HPM Archival Pigment Prints with Collage, Aerosol, Pencil, and Varnish Embellishments on Fine Art Paper by Denial Graffiti Street Artist Modern Pop Art. 2021 Signed Limited Edition Numbered & Custom Framed Archival Pigment Print with Collage, Aerosol, Pencil, and Varnish Embellishments Size: 17.8125 x 23.75 Inches Release: December 09, 2021 Run of: 4 Denial’s Decycled Coach: Pharmaceutical Luxury and Brand Disruption in Street Pop Art Denial’s Decycled Coach is a mixed-media archival pigment print that merges collage, aerosol, pencil, and varnish techniques into a hand-embellished visual attack on luxury branding. Released in 2021 as an extremely limited edition of only 4, each print is signed, numbered, and custom framed, measuring 17.8125 by 23.75 inches. At the center of the composition lies a stylized capsule—rendered in clean, glossy layers—branded with the Coach logo. Its form is both pharmaceutical and sculptural, set against a fragmented background of splattered paint, screenprint halftones, and broken gradients that suggest movement, chaos, and intentional vandalism. The pill, labeled 100MG, serves as a pointed metaphor. It reframes luxury as medication, treating identity, insecurity, and social status as symptoms to be relieved by consumption. This is not a critique from the outside; it is a surgical strike from within. Denial borrows from the brand’s own aesthetic language—its serifed typeface, equestrian motif, and minimal labeling—then disrupts it with gestures that belong to graffiti: sprayed arcs, color streaks, intentional imperfections. The capsule becomes a fetish object, reduced to something digestible, addictive, and ultimately disposable. Corporate Logos as Emotional Currency Denial’s recurring use of logos in his work is not about parody; it is about exposure. In Decycled Coach, the brand’s heritage and refinement are stripped of context and placed into an environment of instability. The work becomes an autopsy of commercial trust. Coach, like many fashion houses, trades on nostalgia, elegance, and aspirational identity. By embedding it within the shape of a pill, Denial questions what it means when a logo provides emotional relief. The suggestion is not subtle—brands function like medicine, numbing pain and offering belonging in exchange for loyalty. The background’s visual noise reinforces this dissonance. Torn patterns and abrupt texture shifts interrupt the central figure, refusing to let the viewer settle into comfort. A traditional ornate gold frame surrounds the chaos, an ironic nod to classical portraiture. It presents the artwork as something precious, even regal, despite its abrasive content. This friction between polish and resistance defines much of Denial’s work in Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork. Material Hybridity and Street-Informed Technique What makes Decycled Coach stand out is its physicality. Unlike digitally composed editions, this hand-embellished multiple incorporates real layers of texture through collage and varnish. Each print becomes a hybrid between printmaking and painting. The surface is manipulated with street-level tools—spray paint and pencil—suggesting the rapid, instinctual mark-making of graffiti writers. Yet the pill shape remains controlled and pristine, emphasizing the clash between authority and rebellion, product and protest. Denial, whose real name is Daniel Bombardier, continues to expand the vocabulary of Street Pop Art by interrogating how capitalist culture manufactures meaning. His art exists not just in critique, but in confrontation. Decycled Coach exemplifies this through its fearless dismantling of visual systems. The framed artwork becomes a mirror to modern consumer logic, where even rebellion can be bought, and where the cure to identity confusion is offered in branded, digestible doses.
$2,500.00