Bold. Oversized. Custom-framed. Built for walls that demand a centerpiece.
Color, scale, finish — every piece engineered like furniture.
I always wanted to get into pop art. It is one of my favorites — colorful and whimsical. I have been creating pop art since 2024, and I studied many of the artists working today. Some are too simple. Most are too much. And almost all of them deliver a plain canvas with no frame, in a standard 48-inch square.
That was never going to be my approach. Newer homes and corporate offices have huge wall space — so I started at 60-inch square and went up from there. I built my own frames, because shadow frames are about the only frame style that hasn't gone out of fashion. I custom-fabricate every one of them, and I developed my own proprietary frame system along the way.
Then I take it one step further: every frame is custom-painted to match the dominant colors of the artwork it surrounds. I use high-end pearl and metallic paint — something I have not seen any other pop artist do. It is the difference between a finished piece and an unfinished canvas.
Today I have around 16 designs and counting. They will all be on display in my own gallery next month. I am also developing a fully outdoor, weather-proof line — neither cold nor heat affects the materials I am using — and I have been integrating leather and suede into the frames themselves. There are a lot of great art shows worldwide, and I plan to be at the best of them.
Money, power, luxury, icons — rendered loud at 60 inches and up, with shadow frames painted to match.
Every piece is designed for the modern luxury home or office. Sixty inches and up — the centerpiece, never the afterthought.
No off-the-shelf moulding. Every frame is fabricated in-house, painted in pearl and metallic, and matched to the artwork it carries.
These aren't renderings. These are finished works — full-size, custom-framed, and standing in the real world.
What's coming next: weatherproof outdoor pop art, frames inlaid with leather and suede, and the world's great art shows.