DS 'Chill' (Blue) Print Available
Tuesday, October 28, 2025 Artist: DS
Title: Chill
Medium: Giclee Print
Size: 48 x 48 cm
Edition: 15
Price: £125
Limited Edition Art Prints, Posters, Giclee Prints & Screen Print Releases
Tuesday, October 28, 2025 Artist: DS
Title: Chill
Medium: Giclee Print
Size: 48 x 48 cm
Edition: 15
Price: £125
Tuesday, October 28, 2025 Artist: Helio Bray
Title: Indie
Medium: Giclee Print
Size: 54.5 x 80 cm
Edition: 75
Price: $298
Helio Bray, born Hélio Ferreira in Lisbon in 1984, is a Portuguese painter who discovered graffiti only when he first lifted a spray can to a wall himself. Raised far from major cities, he encountered no street art scene yet felt an instant alchemy with paint, lettering and public space. Early pieces were built on bespoke alphabets, flowing calligraphic lines that wrapped corners and slid across shutters, earning him the shortened tag “Bray” that now doubles as logo and signature. Years of mural work across Europe and the United States sharpened his sense of scale and speed, but 2012 marked a decisive shift toward studio exploration.
Inside the atelier he fused aerosol with acrylic, ink, collage and resin, moving from pure typography to figurative suggestion: faces, fish, birds and botanical forms emerge through explosive colour fields stopped by hard geometry. The process remains physical: hand-cut stencils, poured pigment and gestural strokes are sanded, masked and varnished until the surface gleams like polished tile. Bray cites city nights, Atlantic waves and childhood comic books as equal influences, aiming to bottle kinetic energy so the viewer feels motion standing still. Collaborations with Vans, DC Shoes, Adidas and Quiksilver pushed his graphics onto apparel, skate decks and boutique interiors, while exhibitions in Madrid, Milan, London and Miami position the work between street culture and contemporary fine art. Constant transformation is his stated creed; each series chases a new spectrum, yet the pulse of graffiti rhythm always underpins the composition, reminding audiences that joy, rebellion and beauty can coexist on any wall, canvas or object that welcomes pigment.
Tuesday, October 28, 2025 Artist: Dan Kitchener
Title: Street Geisha
Medium: Giclee Print
Size: (A1) 59.4 x 84.1 cm
Edition: 50
Price: £175
Dan Kitchener, who also signs his walls as DANK, is a street artist and mural painter from Essex, England. Born in 1974, he trained in illustration and animation, spending early career years crafting television motion graphics where he studied lighting, composition and cinematic pacing. That background now fuels an instantly recognisable style he calls modern impressionist: rain soaked neon cityscapes rendered entirely freehand with spray cans, no stencils, grids or projectors ever used. Photographs taken on late night walks through Tokyo, New York or London provide reference, then layers of saturated colour, blurred edges and electric highlights are built straight onto brick or canvas until the surface pulses like living circuitry. Energy is central; Kitchener runs daily marathons and paints to techno tracks, completing giant murals in days rather than weeks, a pace that keeps strokes loose and emotional. Commissions have come from Paul McCartney, Lenny Kravitz and Miley Cyrus, while public works rise across Europe, Asia and the United States, including the landmark Tokyo Rain piece at Berlin’s Teufelsberg. Solo gallery shows such as Tokyo Rain in Wynwood extend the practice indoors, tracing journeys from snapshot to sketch to painted final, yet the aim remains the same: translate the rush, solitude and strange beauty of urban night into paint so viewers can step inside a fleeting moment and feel raindrops that were never really there.
Tuesday, October 28, 2025 Artist: BlokOne
Title: Love Bombed
Medium: Aerosol & Oil Paint on Paper
Size: 30 x 42 cm
Edition: 25 (UNIQUE)
Price: £225
*available at 9am EST on Thursday October 30th, 2025
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Tuesday, October 28, 2025 Hello friends,
In 2016, I came up with an idea, a concept I called The Daily Creature Project. The plan was simple: to create an original drawing every day for an entire year and share it with my fans and collectors. It became, in many ways, an open sketchbook to the world a glimpse into my imagination, process, and daily creative life.
It turned out to be one of the most transformative creative experiences of my life, so much so that I was inspired to keep going. I continued through 2019 and into 2020. The encouragement and enthusiasm I felt from my collectors, and from the many new fans who joined me along the way, made the journey all the more meaningful.
To those of you who stayed with me and supported me throughout those four years, thank you. I poured so much of myself into each new piece, and I remain deeply grateful for your love, support, and enthusiasm for my art. Now I have a new project that I am excited to share with you...
Starting today, I will be embarking on a new journey, this time with a new approach. About eighteen months ago, I met David Corbett during a phone call while he was recovering from cancer surgery. We were both at turning points in our lives, looking to the universe for a sign of what might come next.
After seeing one of my paintings on social media, David was so moved that he reached out. We became friends, and now we are collaborators. David is an award-winning writer and animation producer, and together our plan is to release one painting per day, each one accompanied by his words.
I will complete one original painting each day, inspired by a couplet from David’s poem. Thirty paintings and thirty verses in thirty days. As many of you know, my work often explores themes of hope, love, reflection, and the quiet wonder of life within the natural world. This is who I am as an artist, and we both believe there can never be too much love in the world.
At the end of one month, just days before Thanksgiving, this journey will conclude. The result will be a fully realized story, a collection featuring my paintings and David’s words. We hope you will join us over the next thirty days as we celebrate The Gift of Love in pictures and in words.
Beginning today, October 28th, and each day for the next 30 days, I will be offering a one-of-a-kind opportunity for you to not only share in this journey, but also to own a piece of it. Each daily painting from this series will be available in my shop at 12 PM EST for $300, on that day only. As many of you know, this is far less than I typically offer my originals for, so consider it a Gift of Love my heartfelt thanks to you for your continued kindness and support over the years. It means more to me than you will ever know.
Each painting will be 9" x 12", acrylic on wood panel, and will come with a printed verse from that day, a certificate of authenticity, and a Gentle Creatures sticker. Additionally, each piece will be signed and numbered according to its day in the series. Please join us as we step into the world of a Gentle Creature, as he shares his quiet wisdom about love with us all.
Warmly, Dan & David
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Tuesday, October 28, 2025 Artist: David Shrigley
Title: Let The Sunshine In
Medium: Multi Color Screen Print
Size: 56 x 76 cm
Edition: 125
Price: UNSURE
*application on Wednesday November 12th, 2025
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David Shrigley is a British artist who turns deadpan humor into sharp social commentary through crude drawings, sculptures, and films. Born in Macclesfield in 1968, he studied environmental art at Glasgow School of Art and stayed in the city that shaped his wry outlook. Using cheap pens and scavenged paper, he sketches wonky dogs, anxious vegetables, and half finished self portraits that speak in blocky capital letters: “I AM PRETTY SURE SOMETHING IS WRONG.” The childlike line belies surgical timing; a single misplaced word can flip laughter into dread. Shrigley’s world is one where balloons beg not to be inflated and gravestones read “DEAD DEAD DEAD,” yet empathy glows beneath the absurdity. He extends the joke into three dimensions: a giant bronze thumbs up titled “Really Good” stood in Trafalgar Square, while taxidermy dogs clutch placards demanding “DEATH TO AMERICA.” These works mock authority while exposing human fragility.
Nominated for the 2013 Turner Prize, he filled the gallery with animatronic figures performing futile tasks, their mechanical clatter echoing everyday despair. Commercial success followed, yet he still mails fake flyers and leaves cryptic notes in library books, insisting art should interrupt routine like a sudden sneeze. Recent projects include directing the dark animated film “The Spine of Night,” designing a line of nonsensical greeting cards, and recording spoken word albums delivered in his trademark monotone. Through it all Shrigley remains a philosophical prankster, proving that a badly drawn cat can ask the biggest questions about meaning, mortality, and why we keep trying.
Tuesday, October 28, 2025 Artist: Guy Denning
Title: Hope
Medium: Hand Embellished 1 Color Screen Print
Size: 24 x 35 cm
Edition: 200
Price: €80
*available at 11am EST on Thursday October 30th, 2025
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Guy Denning is a British painter who channels raw human emotion onto weathered surfaces, creating urgent portraits that feel like pages torn from a private journal. Born in North Somerset in 1965, he is self taught, developing his craft through obsessive study of Rembrandt, Goya, and Bacon while working daylight jobs as a carpenter and illustrator. He gained underground notice in the early 2000s by plastering Bristol streets with stark mixed media faces, each sheet scorched, torn, and stained to suggest lives battered by politics, love, and time. Denning now lives in rural Finistère, Brittany, where the Atlantic wind seems to blow through his studio. Using reclaimed wood, tar, ash, bitumen, oil stick, and aerosol, he builds dense surfaces that hover between drawing and sculpture. Figures emerge from this debris: eyes burn with protest, mouths open in silent howls, hands clutch books or weapons.Color arrives in bruised reds or sulphur flashes, yet the dominant tone is charcoal black, evoking both cave painting and newspaper print.
The artist cites the Arab Spring, refugee crises, and local fishermen’s strikes as catalysts, but insists the work is not reportage; it is an attempt to mirror shared vulnerability. Solo exhibitions in Rome, New York, and London regularly sell out, while public murals in Naples and Los Angeles transform crumbling walls into pleas for empathy. Denning also posts daily sketches online, offering them freely for non commercial use, believing art must circulate like breath. Whether rendering a single protester or a writhing crowd, he seeks the moment when private grief becomes common language, reminding viewers that history is written first on the human face.
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Tuesday, October 28, 2025
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Monday, October 27, 2025 Artist: Beth Xia
Title: Sheep
Medium: Giclee Print
Size: (A2) 42 x 59.4 cm
Edition: OPEN
Price: $129
Beth Xia is a Chinese American artist who paints luminous dreamscapes where memory and myth dissolve into color. Born in Guangzhou in 1993, she grew up among incense filled temples and neon markets, absorbing the contrast of ancient ritual and restless commerce. At seventeen she moved to California, earning a BFA from ArtCenter College of Design and later an MFA at Columbia University. These crossings feed her work: ink traditions meet acrylic haze, eastern motifs float within western abstraction, creating atmospheres that feel both intimate and vast. Xia begins each canvas with automatic graphite marks, letting hand movement summon half remembered stories. She then layers transparent washes, gold leaf, and embroidered thread until figures emerge like spirits caught between worlds. Recurrent symbols include carp swimming through clouds, lotus lanterns adrift on midnight tides, and solitary girls whose eyes reflect entire cities. The palette shifts from jade and vermilion to electric violet, suggesting twilight moments when reality loosens.
Her 2022 solo show at Kasmin Gallery presented monumental scrolls where visitors could walk alongside continuous narratives of migration and return. Xia describes the process as breathing with the painting, allowing error and repair to remain visible, scars that honor impermanence. Recent murals in Shenzhen and Los Angeles transform public walls into shimmering portals, inviting commuters to pause within daydreams. Commercial collaborations with fashion houses translate her textures onto silk scarves worn by performers on world tours. Awards include the Joan Mitchell Foundation Grant and Forbes 30 Under 30 Asia. Whether working on linen twenty feet wide or rice paper the size of a postcard, she seeks the fragile edge where personal history dissolves into collective myth, reminding viewers that identity is not a fixed shore but a tide forever arriving and departing.
Monday, October 27, 2025 Artist: Olga Lomaka
Title: Teasing Not Pleasing (Yellow)
Medium: Varnished 4 Color Screen Print
Size: 21.6 x 29.5 Inches
Edition: 10
Price: $545
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