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Shepard Fairey (OBEY)

Keep It Underground

2015

61 × 45.72 cm

Ed. 2/3

Location: Portugal

https://www.artransfer.com/web/image/product.template/28510/image_1920?unique=22290c8

4,650 € 4650.0 EUR 4,650 €

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About the artwork

Created in 2015, Keep It Underground embodies Shepard Fairey's unwavering commitment to urban culture and artistic rebellion. With its signature graphic style, bold lines, limited color palette and politically charged symbolism, this work celebrates underground movements as spaces of freedom and resistance, calling for the preservation of authenticity in a commercialized art world. Acquired in 2017 at Lisbon's Underdogs gallery in the presence of the artist, this work underscores Fairey's deep connection to the city's vibrant urban art scene.

About the artist

American artist, born in 1970. Lives and works in Los Angeles (USA). Muralist, illustrator and silkscreen artist, Shepard Fairey (Obey) is one of the most influential figures in urban art. Influenced by Andy Warhol, Barbara Kruger and Diego Rivera, he is best known for the HOPE portrait of Barack Obama he created for his presidential campaign in 2008, which has since been acquired by the National Portrait Gallery (Washington, USA). Following the attacks in France on November 13, 2015, Shepard Fairey created a Marianne with the motto "Liberté, Égalité, Fraternité", a work that has now become a national symbol and is on display at the Élysée Palace. In 2019, he will create his hundredth fresco at Place Igor Stravinsky in Paris, next to the Centre Pompidou. Internationally renowned, Shepard Fairey can be found in the collections of the Smithsonian (Washington, USA), the Museum of Modern Art (New York, USA) and the Victoria and Albert Museum (London, UK). He has also exhibited in prestigious venues such as the Fondation Cartier for the "Né dans la rue - Graffiti" exhibition in 2009, and the Institute of Contemporary Art in Boston (USA), where his retrospective "Supply & Demand" was organized in 2009.

“"I'm glad we have them, because I think the message of diversity that all the star symbols convey is more important than ever in the national conversation." - Shepard Fairey (Obey) on his practice”

Additional info

Signed

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