Street Art For Sale

Discover street art for sale online today. Our curated online gallery means you don’t have to go to the streets to see street art. We work with some of the most exciting and unique street artists of the moment and carefully select each and every piece for sale on our site. Whether you’re interested in purchasing a fantastical painting for your home, or looking for a contemporary urban piece, our vast collection offers an array of high-quality and limited edition pieces for you to choose from today.

About the artists

We celebrate how street art has liberated artists to develop extraordinary styles and powerful messages that challenge traditional conventions in the art world and society.

If you’re looking for a piece that breaks down the boundaries of high and low culture, we recommend the prints of Japanese artist Takashi Murakami. Takashii’s ‘Superflat’ style and his colourful and glossy motifs of flowers and faces is heavily influenced by Japanese low culture of manga, kawaii and anime. Murakami’s ability to elevate characteristics of low culture to the walls of art galleries, demonstrates how artists can deconstruct the barriers of what art is categorised into public low culture and exclusive high art.

For a piece that’s closer to home, we love British artist Rebecca Mason who has taken inspiration from Barbara Kruger’s artworks presenting powerful messages and observations on the darker side of society’s expectations of the individual. In the digital print of Everyone’s Got Their S*** Together Apart From Me (2018) Mason presents the viewer with the words ‘Our Lives’ in blue neon light in front of text in a handwritten font. The first-person message reveals the vulnerability that comes with social comparison in modern society, and makes the viewer reflect and contemplate how social pressures affect their own mental wellbeing.

Discover more street artists here.

What is Street Art?

Street art is commonly defined as art created in public spaces using the methods of tagging, fly posting, stencilling, stickers, freehand drawing and projecting videos. Graffiti art comes under the term of street art and commonly refers to images or texts which are sprayed onto public property. Although the movement originated in New York, in recent decades it has expanded across the world in cities such as London, Berlin, Lisbon, Seoul and San Paulo.

Whether its traditional text-based tagging of one’s name on a public street or on a project video within a contemporary art gallery, street art cannot be confined into any genre or technique. This freedom has enabled the movement to create a richly diverse range of artwork which centres around the creative and expressive freedom of the artist.

History and evolution of street art

Street art originated in New York during the 1920s and 30s when teenagers used markers to write names in public spaces. These acts were seen as a marker of identity in the local area usually carried out by youths in poor communities. It was during the 1970s and 1980s that the style was used in subcultures associated with independent artists, political movements and ethnic minorities. These groups used the act of creating artwork in public spaces as a reaction to the social-political climate of the times. Materials such as the spray can were invented which enabled artists to write and draw on a large scale using a variety of mark lengths and colours. Artists began to develop and experiment with resources such as fly posting (pasting paper onto walls), large painted stencil, freehand drawing, and stickers to create different street art styles.

Artists such as Keith Haring used unoccupied advertisement space to experiment and develop their distinct style of using repetitive motifs to critique contemporary social-political issues. Keith Haring began drawing simple motifs of barking dogs using white chalk. The playful symbols gathered critical and commercial attention, however Haring developed these repetitive motifs with the intent to carry subversive and dark undertones. Haring’s most infamous piece Crack is Whack (1986) was a large mural in Lower Manhattan with the painted slogan ‘Crack is Whack’ surrounded by skulls, money, crosses and people. The artwork’s message was about the fatal drug epidemic of crack cocaine used in American cities. By using public space Haring was able to explore the artist’s role as a messenger and critic of society.

Whilst the art world elevated street artists into household names, many local authorities in the cities saw street art, graffiti in particular, as evidence of a degenerating community, and imposed legislation criminalising the act of marking buildings without permission. Artists had to make the decision whether to continue illegally or work with communities and authorities or bring their methods indoors. Feminist conceptual artist Barbara Kruger worked with art institutions to create ‘paste up’ prints in public and private space that challenged society’s ideas of gender, identity, race and power represented in mass culture and media. Her style originated with paste printing declarative statements in the style of negative/positive reproductions of photographs seen in mass culture, to create a juxtaposition of subversive text against conventional images. For the 1989 Women’s March on Washington DC in support for legal abortions laws, Kruger produced a print with the text ‘your body is a battleground’ on a women’s face with information about the march beneath. The pronouns in the text against the photograph of the model distorts the viewer’s expectations of viewing an image of mass culture with the politicalized slogan supporting women’s rights.

The British artist Banksy works under an anonymous pseudonym to protect his identity from criminal prosecution for creating illegal street artwork. Throughout the 1990s, Banksy gained recognition for his stencil work in the streets of Bristol and London. The stencil pieces conjured images and slogans with humour and political undertones of anti-war, anti-capitalism, anti-establishment messages. Throughout the 2000s, Banksy’s popularity gained momentum with his work being sold in high-profiled auctions, whilst local authorities continued to paint over work which was viewed as signs of social decay. Regardless of official actions, Banksy has remained one of the most influential street artists internationally. In 2018, Banksy played a prank on the artworld during a London auction house where his work Balloon Girl (2002) sold for £1.4 million. After the bidding ended an alarm triggered the artwork’s frame to act as a shredder and shred the artwork into pieces. This guerrilla style prank sparked global attention and reminded the art world that Banksy’s reputation and legacy as a street artist remains free from institutionalisation.

With a flair for public art installations, the originality of KEF!’s street art consistently aims to engage the viewer and spread positive energy by incorporating Buddhist teachings, making him an artist who surpasses subjects traditionally associated with street art. His fluid hand motion covers canvas as much as print, painting, paper, or walls. KEF! chose not to train as an artist and instead regarded contemporary street art and its artists as his mentors.

One of our customers’ favourites is the adventurous Hush. Working across mixed techniques of collage, painting and drawing, he is known for bringing Japanese culture to a Western approach of street art. His works use the codes of street art to present to us beautiful portraits celebrating womanly beauty that have been captivating audiences since 2007. Learn more about Hush with our 2016 interview.

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All Art
showing 734 pieces
Woman with the golden hand by Vincent Bardou
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Woman with the golden hand by Vincent Bardou
Woman with the golden hand
Paintings - 120x80 cm
Hope In Hell by Dan Baldwin
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Hope In Hell by Dan Baldwin
Hope In Hell
Prints - 76x74 cm
Crush by L'Atlas
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Crush by L'Atlas
Crush
Paintings - 100x100 cm
Urban Act VIII by Yoann Bonneville YBA
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Urban Act VIII by Yoann Bonneville YBA
Urban Act VIII
Paintings - 150x150 cm
Kid's World by JonOne
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Kid's World by JonOne
Kid's World
Prints - 60x45 cm
Worship (Anbetung) by Ralf Schmidt
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Worship (Anbetung) by Ralf Schmidt
Worship (Anbetung)
Paintings - 100x100 cm
Let the Music Play by Tarek
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Let the Music Play by Tarek
Let the Music Play
Drawings - 23x31 cm
shaolin Monk - 50 x 76 cm  by Cody Choi
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shaolin Monk - 50 x 76 cm  by Cody Choi
shaolin Monk - 50 x 76 cm
Photography - 50x76 cmRent for €60 /mo
SWIM by Naomi Edmondson
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SWIM by Naomi Edmondson
SWIM
Prints - 50x70 cm
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Constrative Mosaic by L'Atlas
Constrative Mosaic
Paintings - 120x120 cm
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Unlock Unlock by L'Atlas
Unlock Unlock
Paintings - 60x60 cm
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One step forward, two steps back by L'Atlas
One step forward, two steps back
Paintings - 150x150 cm
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Kwiksave by Ben G Courgette
Kwiksave
Paintings - 120x120 cm
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Yes by Gavin Turk
Yes
Prints - 38x25 cmRent for €60 /mo
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Invaded Cube by Invader
Invaded Cube
Prints - 100x100 cm
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twin fight by Boris Garanger
twin fight
Paintings - 130x162 cm
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Rêve IX by Yoann Bonneville YBA
Rêve IX
Paintings - 80x80 cm
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The king by Blek Le Rat
The king
Prints - 23x31 cm
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Sing Sing I by Ralf Schmidt
Sing Sing I
Drawings - 60x80 cm
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PIKACHU COSPLAY CHARIZARD by Vincent Bardou
PIKACHU COSPLAY CHARIZARD
Paintings - 100x100 cm
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La fuite by Lucie Lith
La fuite
Paintings - 89x116 cm
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Crâne by Guillaume Larroque
Crâne
Paintings - 19x24 cm
Love Them? Tell Them.
Installation - 200x1700 cm
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Runaway by Peter Horvath
Runaway
Photography - 92x76 cm
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Sing Sing IV by Ralf Schmidt
Sing Sing IV
Drawings - 60x80 cm
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Hands by Martin Thompson
Hands
Prints - 61x51 cmRent for €57 /mo
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Now or never by JonOne
Now or never
Paintings - 135x135 cm
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Spirit Of The Earth by Vincent Bardou
Spirit Of The Earth
Paintings - 120x100 cm
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