Moonage Daydream - limited edition by Shepard Fairey.
Moonage Daydream - limited edition by Shepard Fairey.
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Artist: Shepard Fairey
Dimensions: (print) 18 x 24 inches
Medium: 5 color Screen print.
Edition: Timed Edition - 184/1910
Year: 2023
Condition: Excellent
About the print:
To celebrate the Digital/Blu-Ray release of MOONAGE DAYDREAM, Shepard Fairey working with Mondo, released this limited edition commemorative screen print.
About The Framing and Mounting
This print is framed using our 1.25" by 3/4" tall white frame. Measures 20" x 26" with a 1" margin on superwhite + 3/8" white spacers and UV Gallery Acrylic
About The Artist
From Streetartbio.com
Frank “Shepard Fairey” is a very famous graphic artist, muralist, and overall artist. He was born on February 15, 1970 in Charleston, South Carolina in the United States. In 1988, the artist graduated from Idyllwild Arts Academy in Palm Springs, California. He earned his Bachelor of Fine Arts from the Rhode Island School of Design in Providence, Rhode Island in 1992.
As a young adult, Shepard Fairey became very interested in art. He soon began to use his drawings in T-shirts and skateboards. He was a skateboard-obsessed art student. While in school, Shepard Fairey held a part-time job in a skateboarding shop. Soon after, he hit the skateboard community hard by pasting homemade stickers all over the place. It was then that he realized his desire and interest in the street art culture and graffiti movement. Another strong influence was his love for punk music, which he demonstrated stencils.
One of the first images he ever used was that of Andre the Giant. Shepard Fairey found this image in a newspaper ad and he chose to introduce it to the streets.
Shepard Fairey is one of the most influential street artists of our time. Shepard Fairey’s work has been used in screen-prints, stencils, stickers, masking film illustrations, wheat paste, collages, sculptures, posters, paintings, and murals. Shepard Fairey enjoys working with the colors black, white, and red. Fairey has constantly shifted between the realms of fine art, commercial art, street art, and even political art.