| 40oz Gangsta Pop |  | 50x61cm | 19.69 x 24.02 in | Canvas | 40oz Gangsta Pop raises a glass to origin stories and street nostalgia. An iconic bottle stands at the center against a burst of blues punctuated by playful flashes of green and yellow, echoing the rhythm and attitude of another era. The composition treats the everyday object as cultural emblem, celebrating the sound and spirit of nineties hip hop with affectionate confidence. Here memory becomes icon, and icon becomes identity. |  |
| Bart Cheers |  | 28x35cm | 11.02 x 13.78 in | Canvas Board | Bart Cheers captures mischief in mid celebration. The familiar troublemaker appears delightfully disheveled, sipping a glittering slush while wide eyes drift somewhere beyond responsibility. An energetic abstract ground heightens his presence, turning a simple moment into a neon confession of youthful rebellion. The piece plays with nostalgia and attitude, where humor and chaos meet with unapologetic charm. |  |
| Beer |  | | | Resin’d Wood | Beer treats refreshment with ceremonial importance. A geometric ground alternates polished gold foil with flowing tones of amber and cream, splattered lightly as if the celebration had already begun. Mounted above, an illuminated emblem glows from the resin sealed wood, powered by wall or battery, turning the piece into both sign and shrine. The work raises a visual toast, honoring the simple pleasure that so often gathers people together. |  |
| Bianca |  | 100x100cm | 39.37 x 39.37 in | Concrete on Wood | Bianca blends portrait and surface into a single encounter. Painted upon a concrete ground affixed to wood, the work carries the presence of a wall relocated into the gallery, urban and immediate. The figure emerges with inviting confidence against pop infused surroundings, her expression open to interpretation rather than instruction. The piece offers allure without certainty, allowing each viewer to decide what, precisely, they have been asked to notice. |  |
| Bugs |  | 81x100cm | 31.89 x 39.37 in | Concrete on Wood | Bugs relocates a familiar trickster from screen to street. Painted upon concrete affixed to wood, the surface carries the honesty of a wall while pop tones and metallic accents lend it theatrical flair. The character feels both nostalgic and freshly encountered, as though discovered on a city corner rather than remembered from a cartoon. Lively and confident, the piece celebrates playful rebellion with urban charm. |  |
| Busted |  | 60x60cm | 23.62 x 23.62 in | Resin’d Wood | Busted greets the supernatural with a grin. The familiar warning symbol bursts with red glittered motion and playful splatter, while the ghost itself gleams in a trace of silver foil. Sealed in resin on wood, the image balances nostalgia with irreverence, treating fear as something best answered with style. The piece asks its question lightly, already certain of the answer. |  |
| CM |  | 54x66cm | 21.26 x 25.98 in | Concrete on Wood | CM indulges appetite with cheerful honesty. Set upon a concrete ground alive with graffiti color and scattered cookies, the familiar blue figure enjoys his prize without restraint. Flecks of glitter catch the light like crumbs that refused to be swept away. Playful and self aware, the work celebrates the simple joy of wanting more and never quite apologizing for it. |  |
| Duck Life |  | 23x30cm | 9.06 x 11.81 in | Canvas Board | Duck Life layers media and mischief in equal measure. Newspaper textures set the stage before bold pop color steps forward, centering a grinning duck enjoying a quiet vice with confident ease. The familiar character is filtered through a personal lens, turning recognition into reinterpretation. Both process and play are celebrated, a lighthearted tribute to pop art’s talent for making culture smile at itself. |  |
| Gary |  | | | Canvas Board | Gary reimagines innocence with a knowing smirk. Set against a lively pop ground, the familiar snail appears older and less concerned with expectations, his shell marked with playful doodles like stories collected over time. Red eyes hint at indulgence while the calm posture remains unmistakably self possessed. The piece treats nostalgia with maturity, allowing a childhood character to grow into unapologetic character. |  |
| Hulk |  | 46x38cm | 18.11 x 14.96 in | Canvas | Hulk trades brute force for exuberant spectacle. Graffiti repetitions of his name echo behind a towering silhouette built from shadow and outline, while vertical drips of fluorescent color animate the figure from within. Glittered hair, bright eyes, and flashing teeth lend the presence a celebratory fury, especially under ultraviolet light. The work embraces power with humor, presenting rage not as menace but as a riot of unstoppable energy. |  |
| I Feel Pretty |  | 60x60cm | 23.62 x 23.62 in | Resin’d Wood | I Feel Pretty pairs ornament with unease. A glittering rifle occupies the center, surrounded by bright florals and lively splashes set against a silver field, beauty arranged with deliberate confidence. Hung as a diamond, the composition unsettles expectation while maintaining its charm. The work invites conversation, asking how elegance and danger can share the same frame and why the eye lingers despite itself. |  |
| I’m Rick v2 |  | 33x41cm | 12.99 x 16.14 in | Canvas Board | I’m Rick 2 captures the experiment before the legend. Created as a study for a later commission, the familiar genius adventurer appears in an earlier interpretation, a glimpse into the evolution of the final vision. The image carries the irreverent intellect and reckless confidence of the character, celebrating curiosity sharpened by chaos. As a test piece it preserves process as much as subject, offering a rare look at the moment an idea decided what it wanted to become. |  |
| Magic |  | 65x50cm | 25.59 x 19.69 in | Resin’d Wood | Magic wanders through a mind untethered from ordinary logic. Familiar figures drift among clouds and symbols, playful references appearing and dissolving like thoughts that refuse orderly narration. At the center, a watchful presence anchors the scene while pop elements and dream imagery circulate around it. The composition embraces confusion as process, suggesting that meaning is sometimes discovered not by clarity but by allowing the imagination to speak freely. |  |
| Marvin |  | 73x92cm | 28.74 x 36.22 in | Concrete on Wood | Marvin presents calm mischief with cosmic patience. The familiar figure stands against a surface that feels borrowed from the city, enlivened by bold hues, metallic flashes, and fluorescent accents. The contrast between composed posture and energetic surroundings gives the piece a gentle wit, as though the universe were being contemplated between passing pedestrians. It is both homage and relocation, a character wandering into our world with perfect composure. |  |
| Monkey Business |  | 40.5x51cm | 15.94 x 20.08 in | Canvas | Monkey Business laughs at ambition with impressive sincerity. A suited primate cries out in open frustration while watchful totems hover above like competing inner advisers. Behind him, a patterned barrier suggests the orderly structure he struggles against, cool tones slipping through its openings like thoughts of escape. The piece treats the daily pursuit of success as both comedy and conflict, a portrait of effort caught between duty and instinct. |  |
| Morty Balloon |  | 33x41cm | 12.99 x 16.14 in | Canvas | Morty Balloon floats between humor and empathy. A familiar face appears as a drifting balloon, carried across uneasy swathes of dark blues and black, unsure of its destination. The eyes burst with restless color, revealing more feeling than words could manage. Playful at first glance, the work gently suggests compassion, reminding us that others may be navigating storms we never witness. |  |
| Mr MeeSeeks |  | 50x61cm | 19.69 x 24.02 in | Canvas | Mr. Meeseeks declines the role assigned to him. Reimagined as a carefree outlaw with scythe, gold in hand, and a cigar lit with confidence, the familiar helper abandons obedience for autonomy. The playful transformation turns expectation into satire, suggesting identity should be chosen rather than requested. Beneath the humor rests a simple declaration of independence, a character finally living for himself. |  |
| Neon Flamingo |  | 50x65cm | 19.69 x 25.59 in | Resin’d Wood | Neon Flamingo invites the evening to begin. A tropical setting of suggested water, palms, and reflective lake surrounds a glowing pink Flamingo that shines once powered from wall or battery. The scene balances relaxation with anticipation, as though the night were preparing itself. Sealed in resin on wood, the piece celebrates the cheerful promise of gathering and the simple pleasure of letting the mood arrive. |  |
| Owl |  | 40cm | | Circle Canvas | Owl regards the viewer with playful wisdom. Painted on a circular canvas, the bright blue figure rests upon its branch while poart circles and accents animate the surrounding space. An earthy backdrop steadies the composition, allowing the yellow beak and attentive gaze to hold quiet authority. The piece balances humor and insight, a watchful presence that feels both streetwise and thoughtful. |  |
| Pumbaa |  | 33x41cm | 12.99 x 16.14 in | Canvas | Pumbaa celebrates carefree confidence. The familiar companion appears in unexpected purple, decorated with lively accents while a fluorescent pink nose and glittered tusks bring cheerful exaggeration. Behind him, a palette knife field of bold color adds movement and spontaneity. The piece invites mischief with warmth, a reminder that joy often arrives when dignity politely steps aside. |  |
| Scarface |  | 100x81cm | 39.37 x 31.89 in | Canvas | Scarface stages bravado with theatrical color. A storm of vibrant forms and pop circles surrounds a dark silhouette poised in unmistakable confidence, its interior cut through with glittered glimpses of the world behind it. The contrast turns menace into spectacle, where excess becomes part of the aesthetic language. Blending graffiti energy with pop clarity, the piece captures ambition at full volume, unapologetic and impossible to ignore. |  |
| Scooby |  | 50x61cm | 19.69 x 24.02 in | Canvas | Scooby approaches nostalgia with a relaxed grin. Set against a lively field of wandering color, the familiar companion lounges with glittered accents and a gaze that suggests recent indulgence and imminent appetite. The playful reinterpretation leans into humor and comfort, a gentle nod to late night cravings and carefree company. The piece celebrates the easy camaraderie found in simple pleasures. |  |
| Skull Mixed |  | 40x30cm | 15.75 x 11.81 in | Canvas Board | Skull Mixed layers mediums as though they were memories. Watercolor washes of blue, yellow, and white set a gentle atmosphere while acrylic, alcohol ink, and touches of gold foil interrupt with brighter insistence. Within the skull, small doodled forms create a private narrative, suggesting thoughts that continue even after the voice is gone. The piece balances play and reflection, a meditation on how identity lingers in marks we leave behind. |  |
| SpongeBob |  | | | Canvas Board | SpongeBob grows up without losing his peculiar charm. Set against an abstract suggestion of water, the familiar form dissolves into fluid color while wide eyes reveal experiences far beyond childhood innocence. The interpretation leans into humor and reflection at once, presenting a character shaped by time yet still unmistakably himself. Playful and surreal, the work imagines maturity as simply another strange adventure. |  |
| Suspicious |  | 100x100cm | 39.37 x 39.37 in | Canvas | Suspicious turns a familiar arcade chase into a study of doubt. Arranged in careful formation, the bright figures watch one another with uncertain intent, their glances forming a silent conversation the viewer is invited to decode. Fluid color and silver glitter elevate the retro cast into something almost ceremonial, playful yet strangely tense. Each encounter suggests a different story, leaving the question unresolved and delightfully persistent. |  |
| Taz |  | 73x92cm | 28.74 x 36.22 in | Concrete on Wood | Taz arrives with unapologetic motion. Concrete texture anchors the piece while vibrant paint and gleaming elements whirl around the figure, capturing the spirit of cheerful chaos. The combination of street material and pop color amplifies the character’s energy, turning movement into atmosphere. Bold and exuberant, the work insists on being noticed and rewards the attention with delight. |  |
| The Gorilla |  | 70x70cm | 27.56 x 27.56 in | Canvas | The Gorilla dresses confidence in formal attire. Presented from the shoulders up, the figure appears ready for an interview, composed and self assured beneath playful pop color. The contrast between primal strength and social ritual offers gentle humor, suggesting that professionalism is often just instinct wearing a tie. |  |
| The Shark |  | 70x70cm | 27.56 x 27.56 in | Canvas | The Shark arrives with unmistakable certainty. Clad for the same imagined interview, the sleek subject carries an air of quiet arrogance, as though the outcome were already decided. Through bright pop styling and character driven wit, the work reflects on ambition and competition, reminding us that the workplace can feel like open water. |  |
| Unicornasaurus |  | 50x61cm | 19.69 x 24.02 in | Canvas | Unicornasaurus delights in impossible evolution. A regal creature part dinosaur, part daydream stands with wand in hand, its glittering star suggesting belief as a creative act. Behind it, four distinct pop fields divide the space like alternate realities waiting to be chosen. The piece invites imagination without apology, proposing that the worlds we invent often say more about us than the one we inherit. |  |
| What You Looking At? |  | 100x50cm | 39.37 x 19.69 in | Resin'd Wood | What Are You Looking At captures a standoff in playful form. Two familiar arcade spirits face one another across a vibrant field of color, their glances charged with comic suspicion. Fluid tones and gold glitter outlines elevate the moment from game to attitude, as if pride itself had become a character. Sealed in resin on wood, the piece turns a simple exchange into a humorous reflection on confrontation and ego. |  |
| Wile E Coyote |  | 81x100cm | 31.89 x 39.37 in | Concrete on Wood | Wile E. Coyote honors determination in its most comedic form. Set on a concrete ground enriched with vibrant color and reflective touches, the figure pauses mid scheme with a beer raised as if to toast the next inevitable plan. The mixture of street texture and pop sensibility transforms failure into character, turning persistence itself into the hero of the composition. The work smiles at ambition while quietly admiring it. |  |
| Yoshi |  | 21x30cm | 8.27 x 11.81 in | Resin’d Wood | Yoshi trades innocence for defiance with a mischievous smile. Set atop embedded coins beneath a resin gloss, the familiar companion appears relaxed, irreverent, and entirely unconcerned with approval. The gesture is less confrontation than declaration, a playful insistence on living freely despite expectation. Nostalgia meets attitude here, reminding us that growing up sometimes means choosing oneself first. |  |