Untitled Pointman & Vick Silkscreen Print by Verdy x Futura 2000- Leonard McGurr

Untitled Pointman & Vick Silkscreen Print by Verdy x Futura 2000- Leonard McGurr

$5,225.00
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Untitled Pointman & Vick Silkscreen Print by Verdy x Futura 2000- Leonard McGurr Hand-Pulled on Deckled Mohawk Fine Art Paper Limited Edition Screenprint Artwork. 2025 Signed & Numbered Limited Edition of 40 Artwork Size 18x24  Silkscreen Print Stylized Vick Panda Rabbit holding a Pointman Sci Fi Creature in Red, Black & White. Verdy x Futura 2000: A Dynamic Dialogue in Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork The 2025 limited edition silkscreen print titled Untitled Pointman & Vick is a highly collectible collaboration between two titans of Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork—Verdy and Leonard McGurr, also known as Futura 2000. This hand-pulled 18x24 inch artwork, limited to only 40 signed and numbered editions, brings together two iconic characters born from very different visual traditions: Verdy’s Vick, a panda-rabbit hybrid pulsing with urban cuteness and punk energy, and Futura’s Pointman, an angular, sci-fi inspired alien form that has long represented the artist’s abstract evolution of graffiti since the 1980s. The synergy of these two figures positioned together on a stark white canvas creates a striking and unmistakable visual statement. Character Fusion: From Tokyo Subculture to NYC Futurism Verdy’s Vick, a staple of Japanese youth culture and streetwear, is rendered with bold lines, minimalism, and emotional defiance. Often seen in his works tied to Girls Don’t Cry and Wasted Youth, the Vick figure represents innocence crossed with resistance, captured here with expressive posture and his recognizable spiked hair and long ears. In this piece, Vick stands confidently while clutching Futura’s Pointman—a creature that has become emblematic of space-age graffiti abstraction. The Pointman figure, often portrayed as detached and observing, now appears anthropomorphized yet held in a position of connection, suggesting creative control, reverence, or even confrontation. Leonard McGurr, born in the United States, redefined graffiti art with his experimental use of shapes, negative space, and conceptual narrative. His Pointman character broke away from traditional lettering and tags, opting instead for a visual language that combined comic book energy, cosmic theory, and social metaphor. This character now enters Verdy’s minimalist playground, blurring lines between eras and aesthetics. Minimalist Form with Maximum Impact Printed in red, black, and white, the silkscreen’s visual economy amplifies the tension and harmony between the two characters. The limited palette makes the composition pop with clarity, a visual nod to both vintage animation and punk zine graphics. Each line is deliberate. Each shape speaks volumes. The exaggerated proportions and surreal character styling are a testament to both artists’ skill in balancing humor, symbolism, and subculture in visual form. The work functions as a mirror of mutual respect between two worlds—Verdy’s Japanese design-driven storytelling and Futura’s American avant-garde rebellion. A Collectible Print for the Global Art Vanguard As a signed and numbered edition of just 40, this 18x24 inch silkscreen print is a rare artifact that ties two global artistic forces into a single unified piece. It represents more than just collaboration—it embodies cross-generational momentum in street pop and graffiti art. Fans and collectors of either artist will immediately recognize the cultural and historical significance embedded in the composition. Verdy and Futura 2000 have together constructed a moment that celebrates character-based iconography as legitimate, emotional, and deeply impactful contemporary art. This print is not just a visual work—it is a document of two worlds shaking hands through their art.

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