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Sculpture Dissected POPek (RED) by Jason Freeny x Whatshisname

Sculpture BFF BLACK by KAWS

Sculpture Companion Flayed (Black) by Kaws, Open Edition

Sculpture Small Lie (Black) by KAWS x Medicom Toys

Edvard Munch Skateboard Triptych – The Scream (1893)

Edvard Munch Skateboard Triptych – The Scream (1893)

Bringing together tradition and contemporary culture, Musart Boutique is proud to present our exclusive original collection Musart on Decks featuring limited edition skateboard decks, displaying art historical timeless masterpieces which bridge the traditional history of art and contemporary [skateboarding culture](https://musartboutique.com/product-category/skateboard-decks/) at accessible prices. Part of Musart Boutique’s original collection Musart on Decks comes this exclusive limited edition of 100 Edvard Munch Skateboard Triptych features his iconic work [The Scream (1893)](https://www.sothebys.com/en/videos/edvard-munch-the-scream). The Norwegian symbolist artist Edvard Munch’s iconic series of four versions of his work titled “Der Schrei die Natur” (the scream of nature) popularly known as “The Scream”. Three of the original four versions made as both tempera and pastels are currently found at the National Gallery in Norway, however, one of the four versions in pastel was auctioned in 2012 at Sotheby’s Impressionist and Modern Art auction to a private collector for nearly $120,000,000, making it the second highest price achieved at that time by a painting at auction. In a diary entry by Edvard Munch dating to January 22, 1892 the artist states: “I was walking along the road with two friends – the sun was setting – suddenly the sky turned blood red – I paused, feeling exhausted, and leaned on the fence – there were blood and tongues of fire above the blue-black fjord and the city – my friends walked on, and I stood there trembling with anxiety – and I sensed an infinite scream passing through nature.” Edvard Munch’s “Scream” is often described as a representation of the existentialist feelings and moods characterizing the nineteen-century [Fin-de-siècle](https://musartboutique.com/product-category/klimt/) period. Like [Leonardo da Vinci](https://musartboutique.com/our-artists/leonardo-da-vinci/)‘s Mona Lisa, Edvard Munch’s The Scream is one of the most iconic artworks in the history of art with its androgynous figure, skull-shaped head, elongated hands, wide eyes, flaring nostrils, and open mouth, which has now been ingrained forever in our collective cultural consciousness. - Photo Credits: © Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York. Scala / Art Resource, NY.

EUR 540.00
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Frida Kahlo Skateboard Deck Triptych – Two Fridas (1939)

Frida Kahlo Skateboard Deck Triptych – Two Fridas (1939)

this exclusive limited edition of 100 Frida Kahlo Skateboard Deck Triptych featuring her notorious work The Two Fridas (1939). After divorcing[Diego Rivera](https://musartboutique.com/celebrate-frida-kahlo-art-revolution/), the artist once again represents two figures holding hands, who are mirror images of one another except for their differing Mexican and European attires. Prior to marrying Rivera in 1929, Frida Kahlo enjoyed wearing the European dress of the era evidenced through the self-portrait figure on the left, representative of her European heritage. After marrying Rivera and their mutual involvement with the Mexican communist party, which romanticized Mexican indigenous communities, [Frida](https://musartboutique.com/product-category/kahlo/) Kahlo was encouraged by Rivera to wear her iconic [traditional Mexican attire](https://www.cnn.com/style/article/frida-kahlo-mexican-fashion/index.html) represented in the self-portrait on the right. Frida does not limit herself to depicting the multicultural duality in her identity. Instead, she links her traditional European and Mexican attires to her relationship with Diego Rivera, through the visceral representation of the bond expressed through a vein joining both figures. On one end, the Frida wearing the Mexican attire appears strong and filled with blood while holding Rivera”™s portrait on one hand, and the hand of the European-dressed Frida with the other. On the other end, the Frida dressed in traditional European clothes appears with an exposed suffering heart which clamps down the figurative and literal tie to Rivera with a hemostat. Frida”™s suffering brought by her literal and metaphorical rupture with Rivera is graphically represented in the spilling blood which runs and stains her white and gold-embroidered European dress.

EUR 540.00
1