Kenny Scharf

One of the pioneers of contemporary Street Art, Scharf’s work spans painting, sculpture, installation, murals, performance, and fashion design. He employs a range of techniques and media to create hallucinatory worlds filled with cartoon characters and brightly-colored anthropomorphic blobs.

Roy Lichtenstein

Roy Lichtenstein was a founder of Pop Art in America. He celebrates and satirizes the common things of everyday life. At first, his art was based on commercial ads and characters in comic strips, but he later expanded subjects to include landscapes, still-lifes, figures, and the history of painting.

Jean-Michel Basquiat

Grounded in New York’s early 1980’s music and graffiti subcultures, artist Jean-Michel Basquiat created paintings covered with text and codes of all kinds: words, letters, numerals, pictograms, logos, and more. Before his career as a painter, he produced punk-inspired postcards for sale on the street, and became known for political and poetic graffiti.

Keith Haring

Keith Haring was an artist, filmmaker, and performer whose work responded to urban street culture of the 1980s. Inspired by graffiti artists whose marks covered New York subway cars, Haring frequently drew in white chalk over the black paper used to cover vacant advertising panels.

Monika GilSing

Monika GilSing specializes in producing abstract and figurative artworks, encompassing paintings, illustrations, sculptures and textiles. Her distinctive style employs vivid, flat-edged techniques. GilSing frequently crafts artwork for outdoor settings, with a focus on kinetic and wind-responsive sculptures and large-scale textiles called Wind Images.