Western

10 artworks

  • Protect the Sacred- Offset Lithograph Print by Shepard Fairey- OBEY

    Shepard Fairey- OBEY Protect the Sacred- Offset Lithograph Print by Shepard Fairey- OBEY

    Protect the Sacred Limited Edition Graffiti Artwork Offset Lithograph Print on Cream Speckle Tone Paper by street artist Shepard Fairey. 2015 Signed & Numbered 24x36 Edition of 200- Protect the Sacred, 2015 Offset lithograph in colors on thick speckled cream paper 36 x 24 inches (91.4 x 61 cm) (sheet) Ed. 200 Signed, numbered, and dated in pencil along lower edge Published by Obey Giant, Los Angeles Protect the Sacred Offset Lithograph by Shepard Fairey Protect the Sacred by Shepard Fairey is a landmark piece of Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork that delivers both a powerful visual experience and an urgent social message. Released in 2015 as a signed and numbered limited edition of 200, this offset lithograph is printed on thick cream Speckletone paper and measures 24x36 inches. Fairey, one of the most influential voices in contemporary street art, uses this work to amplify Indigenous voices and underscore the importance of honoring land, culture, and environmental sanctity. Symbolism and Visual Composition The composition features a young Indigenous figure standing bare-backed at the edge of a sacred body of water, flanked by a trio of wild horses. The central figure stares into the distance, symbolizing spiritual reflection, generational strength, and resistance. A bold red sun radiates behind a jagged mountain range, creating a powerful sense of harmony and tension. The sun’s rays stretch out like a mandala, suggesting divine illumination and cyclical renewal. The use of high-contrast red, yellow, and black evokes both urgency and reverence—colors often tied to warning as well as heritage. Every element in the composition has a voice. The water, rendered in rippling blocks of red and yellow, suggests instability and reflection. The horses symbolize freedom, natural power, and cultural continuity. Shepard Fairey roots this work in deep respect for Indigenous traditions and cosmologies, which hold land and nature not as resources but as sacred relations. Offset Printing as Political Tool While Shepard Fairey is globally known for his screenprint and stencil work, the choice of offset lithograph printing for Protect the Sacred is intentional. Offset printing allows for broader distribution and reproduction fidelity, aligning with Fairey’s ethos of accessible political art. The print maintains his hallmark sharp linework, layering techniques, and propaganda-inspired layout, but presents them with the finesse of a high-resolution poster. This makes the work not just a collector’s object but a tool of advocacy—designed for walls, protests, and public dialogue. Activist Roots and Cultural Solidarity This artwork was created in support of Honor the Treaties, an organization that uses art to amplify the voices of Indigenous communities fighting for environmental justice. The print foregrounds the relationship between sacred land and Indigenous sovereignty—a central concern for Native activists and water protectors across North America. Fairey’s involvement in this movement is not performative; he lends his visual language, platform, and printing resources to amplify those historically silenced. Protect the Sacred stands as a prime example of how Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork can transcend aesthetic to become cultural weaponry. Shepard Fairey’s offset lithograph not only reminds the viewer of past injustices but demands present accountability. It is a call to remember, a call to protect, and a call to listen.

    $1,269.00

  • Austin Silkscreen Print by Nate Duval

    Nate Duval Austin Silkscreen Print by Nate Duval

    Austin 3-Color Silkscreen Print on Fine Art Paper by Pop Artist Nate Duval Limited Edition Artwork. 2012 Signed Limited Edition of 100 Artwork Size 24x12 Austin TX Bat Playing Acoustic Guitar

    $134.00

  • Sale -15% Watch Over Us Original Oil Painting by Dan Christofferson- Beeteeth

    Dan Christofferson- Beeteeth Watch Over Us Original Oil Painting by Dan Christofferson- Beeteeth

    Watch Over Us Original Die Cut Vinyl, Oil Paint on Wood Cradled Panel ready to hang by Dan Christofferson- Beeteeth Graffiti Street Artist Modern Pop Art. "Watch over us" - 24"x32" Die-cut vinyl on the panel for my "West Was Won" show. -Dan Christofferson

    $1,311.00 $1,114.00

  • Cowboy Armadillo Hummingbird Silkscreen Print by Nate Duval

    Nate Duval Cowboy Armadillo Hummingbird Silkscreen Print by Nate Duval

    Cowboy Armadillo Hummingbird Silkscreen Print by Nate Duval on Fine Art Paper Limited Edition Pop Art Artwork. 2010 Signed & Numbered Limited Edition of 25 Artwork Size 24x15.25

    $67.00

  • Sway With The Wind Giclee Print by Curiot Tlalpazotl

    Curiot Tlalpazotl Sway With The Wind Giclee Print by Curiot Tlalpazotl

    Storm On The Horizon Giclee Print by Curiot Tlalpazotl Artwork Limited Edition Print on Moab Entrada Fine Art Paper Graffiti Pop Street Artist. 2014 Signed & Numbered Limited Edition of 30 Artwork Size 20x16 Mexican Indian Latin Themed Stylized Tribal Folk Lore. Storm On The Horizon Giclee Print by Curiot Tlalpazotl: Mythic Reverberations in Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork Storm On The Horizon is a limited edition giclee print created in 2014 by the renowned Mexican street pop art and graffiti artist Curiot Tlalpazotl. Printed on Moab Entrada fine art paper, this 20 x 16 inch signed and numbered work is part of a rare edition of only 30. The piece embodies the artist's signature synthesis of folkloric symbolism, futuristic mythologies, and visual storytelling rooted in pre-Hispanic culture. Curiot’s art is known for its balance of vibrancy and mystique, a fusion that transforms ancient cultural references into visual narratives accessible to contemporary viewers. Mesoamerican Spirituality Rendered Through Modern Techniques Storm On The Horizon depicts a surreal being woven from animal parts, ceremonial regalia, and neon-hued energies. The creature, haloed in pink tones and iridescent beams, appears in motion—arms outstretched and limbs spiraling—suspended in a timeless void. This hybrid entity channels elements from Mesoamerican iconography, but is rendered through a lens of post-digital surrealism. The concentric arrangement and flowing fur-like textures evoke the ceremonial attire worn in indigenous rituals, while the faceted, mask-like visage suggests an otherworldly spirit or deity. The soft gradients and fluid forms are enhanced by the high-fidelity giclee process, allowing each layer of color and detail to be captured with nuance and precision. Curiot Tlalpazotl’s Vision and Cultural Resonance Curiot, whose real name is Favio Martínez, is a Mexican-born artist recognized for his murals, prints, and gallery works that navigate themes of lost traditions, urban disconnection, and spiritual reawakening. His adopted surname, Tlalpazotl, reflects a re-rooting in indigenous language and identity, honoring the cultural legacies of Mexico’s past while confronting the fragmentation caused by colonization and modern consumer culture. Storm On The Horizon is emblematic of this vision—neither nostalgic nor didactic, it builds new symbols that are equally spiritual and psychedelic, anchored in Mexican folklore yet radically forward-looking. The palette’s warmth draws viewers in, only to reveal a deeper meditation on memory, loss, and the cyclical nature of history. Myth Reimagined as Street Pop and Fine Art Fusion The power of Storm On The Horizon lies in its ability to blend tribal aesthetics with contemporary techniques without diminishing either. As Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork, it operates in multiple spaces—public murals, fine art collections, and underground zines—while retaining its cultural pulse. Curiot's use of soft pastels, radiant geometries, and hybrid figures reinvents the language of street art, infusing it with ritualistic depth. This print, although a static object, hums with movement and metaphysical energy, suggesting both a literal and symbolic storm gathering force. It serves not only as a visual spectacle but as a portal into a cosmology that exists between ancestors and androids, gods and avatars, tradition and transcendence.

    $350.00

  • Sale -15% Matrilineal Original Oil Painting by Dan Christofferson- Beeteeth

    Dan Christofferson- Beeteeth Matrilineal Original Oil Painting by Dan Christofferson- Beeteeth

    Matrilineal Original Die Cut Vinyl, Oil Paint on Wood Cradled Panel ready to hang by Dan Christofferson- Beeteeth Graffiti Street Artist Modern Pop Art. "Matrilineal" - 24"x32" Die-cut vinyl on the panel for my "West Was Won" show. -Dan Christofferson

    $1,311.00 $1,114.00

  • Sale -15% Possession Original Oil Painting by Dan Christofferson- Beeteeth

    Dan Christofferson- Beeteeth Possession Original Oil Painting by Dan Christofferson- Beeteeth

    Possession Original Die Cut Vinyl, Oil Paint on Wood Cradled Panel ready to hang by Dan Christofferson- Beeteeth Graffiti Street Artist Modern Pop Art. "Possession" - 24"x32" Die-cut vinyl on the panel for my "West Was Won" show. -Dan Christofferson

    $1,311.00 $1,114.00

  • Virgen De Las Estrellas Silkscreen Print by Ernesto Yerena Montejano- Hecho Con Ganas

    Ernesto Yerena Montejano- Hecho Con Ganas Virgen De Las Estrellas Silkscreen Print by Ernesto Yerena Montejano- Hecho Con Ganas

    Virgen De Las Estrellas Limited Edition 4-Color Hand-Pulled Silkscreen Print on Fine Art Paper by Ernesto Yerena Montejano Graffiti Street Artist Modern Pop Art. 2017 Signed 4 Color Screen Print Size: 24 x 18 inches Limited Edition of 200

    $352.00

  • Josh Has Dysentery Original Arcylic Painting by J-Flood

    J-Flood Josh Has Dysentery Original Arcylic Painting by J-Flood

    Josh Has Dysentery Original One of a Kind Acrylic Painting Artwork on Stretched Canvas by Popular Street Graffiti Artist J-Flood. 2010 Original Painting Signed in Verso 24x10 Some light hairline cracking

    $450.00

  • Sale -15% Destiny Original Oil Painting by Dan Christofferson- Beeteeth

    Dan Christofferson- Beeteeth Destiny Original Oil Painting by Dan Christofferson- Beeteeth

    Destiny Original Die Cut Vinyl, Oil Paint on Wood Cradled Panel ready to hang by Dan Christofferson- Beeteeth Graffiti Street Artist Modern Pop Art. "Destiny" - 24"x32" Die-cut vinyl on the panel for my "West Was Won" show. -Dan Christofferson

    $1,311.00 $1,114.00

Western

Western Motifs in Urban Artistry

The Western genre, with its distinctive iconography and mythos, has found a unique expression in the urban landscapes of pop art, street art, and graffiti. This genre, which conjures images of the wild frontier, cowboys, and the old American West, juxtaposes against the contemporary settings of city walls and galleries. Urban artists have repurposed Western motifs to comment on modern issues, blending nostalgia with commentary on topics ranging from commercialization to identity politics. By reimagining cowboys and Western vistas in a modern context, street artists create a dialogue between the old frontier and contemporary urban challenges, thereby preserving the Western myth while also scrutinizing its relevance in modern society.

Revival and Reinvention through Street Art

Western themes have been revived and reinvented through the lens of street and graffiti art. Once the purview of classic cinema and literature, Western imagery now adorns cityscapes, imbuing them with the spirit of rebellion and freedom that the frontier once represented. This shift has allowed a new generation to access and reinterpret the Western aesthetic, using it as a vehicle for satire or as a means to explore themes of lawlessness and governance, often drawing parallels between the rugged individualism of Western heroes and the autonomy of the street artist.

Pop Art's Embrace of Western Iconography

In the realm of pop art, the Western theme has been embraced as a potent symbol of American culture. Artists have taken the familiar tropes of the Western world and infused them with bright colors and commercial sensibilities, reflecting the ways in which these narratives have been commodified and absorbed into the collective consciousness. The transformation of these themes within pop art also serves to critique the cultural appropriation and myth-making that so often accompanies representations of the Western past.

Impact on Contemporary Visual Culture

Street art's incorporation of Western themes is a testament to the genre's enduring impact on contemporary visual culture. These artistic expressions not only preserve the legacy of the Western narrative but also challenge viewers to reconsider the mythology of the American West through the subversive lens of street and pop art. As this interplay between past and present continues to evolve, the influence of Western motifs in urban art is a vibrant example of how historical narratives are constantly being rewritten and reimagined in the public sphere.

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© 2025 Sprayed Paint Art Collection,

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