Imbue (1988) - Rare & Archive Print





| €111 | ||
|---|---|---|
| €101 | ||
| €96 | ||
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Rare & Archive Print, a hand-signed lithography from the 2010–2020 period, in a limited edition 01/30, 400 × 300 mm, originating from the United Kingdom and sold with a frame in gold and black.
Description from the seller
Hello
I’m offering you this superb Imbue print!
Original edition of 30 copies, this is the
No. 1
Provenance: sale of the artist's archive, a few stickers will accompany your purchase.
Express shipping, fully insured and trackable internationally!
All buyers are responsible for any customs charges.
Nicknamed 'the new Banksy,' Imbue does not just write his name on walls.
Provocative and malicious, the street artist distorts advertisements or recruitment posters for the army and even goes so far as to insert a naughty Snow White into the shelves of a Disney store. Playing with symbols, he melts a Coca Cola bottle into the body of the Virgin Mary, subverting religious and popular iconography to give them a new meaning.
In 2008, he installed vending machines with powdered sugar, writing 'cocaine' and 'heroin' on them on Brighton pier, without concern, questioning the public and authorities about the drugs found on every street corner.
Hello
I’m offering you this superb Imbue print!
Original edition of 30 copies, this is the
No. 1
Provenance: sale of the artist's archive, a few stickers will accompany your purchase.
Express shipping, fully insured and trackable internationally!
All buyers are responsible for any customs charges.
Nicknamed 'the new Banksy,' Imbue does not just write his name on walls.
Provocative and malicious, the street artist distorts advertisements or recruitment posters for the army and even goes so far as to insert a naughty Snow White into the shelves of a Disney store. Playing with symbols, he melts a Coca Cola bottle into the body of the Virgin Mary, subverting religious and popular iconography to give them a new meaning.
In 2008, he installed vending machines with powdered sugar, writing 'cocaine' and 'heroin' on them on Brighton pier, without concern, questioning the public and authorities about the drugs found on every street corner.

