Mr Oreke - FELIX THE CAT





Catawiki Buyer Protection
Your payment’s safe with us until you receive your object.View details
Trustpilot 4.4 | 132849 reviews
Rated Excellent on Trustpilot.
Felix the Cat, an original mixed-media artwork by Mr.Oreke (France, 2025), 70 by 70 cm, signed by hand at the lower right and on the reverse.
Description from the seller
Original work
Acrylic on cotton canvas
Signed bottom right and on the back.
70x70cm
Margin of 10cm
Total size: 80x80cm
Canvas shipped rolled in a tube
Certificate of authenticity provided
Born in 1986, Mr.Oreke is a self-taught French artist describing his work as “Street Pop Art.” In the early 2000s, he encountered the visual arts through graffiti practice. Armed with his spray cans, he began covering walls with his colorful drawings before continuing his gesture on the canvas. His style inherits from the Pop Art movement and the aesthetics of comics. Abstraction predominates in the style of his early years. The singularity of Mr.Oreke is perceptible in his backgrounds, which he mainly exploits with spray paint, in the manner of graffiti. The artist combines ink with acrylic, and sometimes heterogeneous elements such as banknotes. The narrative, tinted with humor, is endowed with whimsy and a liberating energy. A formal freedom is added through a mix of collages, drips, typographic elements... and it echoes comic books.
Original work
Acrylic on cotton canvas
Signed bottom right and on the back.
70x70cm
Margin of 10cm
Total size: 80x80cm
Canvas shipped rolled in a tube
Certificate of authenticity provided
Born in 1986, Mr.Oreke is a self-taught French artist describing his work as “Street Pop Art.” In the early 2000s, he encountered the visual arts through graffiti practice. Armed with his spray cans, he began covering walls with his colorful drawings before continuing his gesture on the canvas. His style inherits from the Pop Art movement and the aesthetics of comics. Abstraction predominates in the style of his early years. The singularity of Mr.Oreke is perceptible in his backgrounds, which he mainly exploits with spray paint, in the manner of graffiti. The artist combines ink with acrylic, and sometimes heterogeneous elements such as banknotes. The narrative, tinted with humor, is endowed with whimsy and a liberating energy. A formal freedom is added through a mix of collages, drips, typographic elements... and it echoes comic books.

