Recently Uploaded Works
Lasveguix Marianne Obey Road Sign #2
On this authentic road sign, Lasveguix presents a new variation on his signature urban aesthetic. At the center, a female figure inspired by Obey's iconography emerges from a dense collage of poster fragments, shattered typography, and vibrant colors. The portrait's deep blue contrasts with the layers of torn paper surrounding it, evoking the ephemeral and dynamic nature of city walls. The reflective texture of the panel, still visible beneath the collage, creates a subtle interplay of light and reinforces the contrast between the rigidity of street furniture and the expressive freedom of street art. The panel's red borders frame the composition, a reminder of its functional origins, now repurposed as an artistic medium. The superimposed layers of paper, sometimes worn, sometimes vibrant, give the whole an almost sculptural depth. One perceives the accumulation of time, the traces of passages, the visual narratives that overlap to form a fragment of the city frozen in a moment. With this work, Lasveguix blurs the lines between symbol, raw material, and urban aesthetics. He transforms a utilitarian object into a medium imbued with visual poetry, where the icon is reborn in the heart of urban chaos, between collective memory and artistic reinvention.
€500,00
Lasveguix Marianne Obey Road Sign #1
On this genuine, repurposed road sign, Lasveguix deploys one of his signature artistic techniques: a vibrant collage, saturated with fragments of posters, shattered typography, and urban textures that seem torn from the city walls. At the heart of this composition emerges the figure of Marianne, inspired by Obey's aesthetic, a symbol of freedom and civic engagement. Marianne's silhouette emerges like a revelation amidst a controlled visual chaos. The torn layers, vibrant colors, and overlapping paper create a sense of depth reminiscent of the natural erosion of urban walls, where posters follow one another, overlap, and ultimately tell a collective story. The reflective background of the sign, partially visible beneath the artistic interventions, creates a striking contrast between the rigidity of the traffic code and the free-spirited energy of street art. The splashes of pink paint, the graffiti, and the artist's signature reinforce the impression of an object taken from public space and transformed into a unique work of art. With this piece, Lasveguix plays on boundaries: those between republican symbol and pop culture, between regulated space and personal expression, between erasure and revelation. The work becomes a fragment of the city, frozen in time, where Marianne is reborn in the heart of urban chaos.
€500,00
Lasveguix Chaplin Road Sign
In this unique work, Lasveguix repurposes a real road sign, transforming it into an artistic medium rich in meaning and contrasts. At the heart of the sign, a fragmented collage reveals an iconic image of Charlot, the legendary character portrayed by Charlie Chaplin, sitting with a small dog. This emblematic figure of silent cinema emerges through layers of torn posters, partially legible typography, and overlapping urban motifs. The reflective background of the sign, still visible in places, creates a striking dialogue between the regulated world of road signs and the raw energy of street art. The blackened edges, scratches, and tags added by the artist reinforce the impression of an object taken from the street and reinvented. The layering of textures—torn paper, traces of glue, natural wear and tear, and painted interventions—lends the piece an almost archaeological dimension. Like a fragment of the urban landscape frozen in time, the panel tells the story of the street while paying homage to Chaplin, a timeless symbol of humanity, poetry, and melancholy. By using a medium as codified and functional as the traffic sign, Lasveguix blurs the lines between art, street furniture, and poetic subversion. The work then becomes a hybrid object, both familiar and subversive, where iconic tradition and urban chaos meet to form a piece with a powerful and evocative aesthetic.
€500,00
Lasveguix Urban cow - The Laughing Cow
This work of Lasveguix boldly reinterprets the iconic Laughing Cow , a familiar figure in French popular culture, by placing it in a vibrant urban setting. At the center of the composition, the famous smiling red cow appears in large format, surrounded by torn posters, raw textures, typographic fragments, and tags that create a living wall, typical of the artist's street art style. The slogan "Vachement Bon" (Very Good) appears at the top, while the bottom of the image reveals, partially hidden beneath torn posters, the inscription "La Vache qui Rit" (The Laughing Cow) . This interplay of superimpositions creates a visual tension between the original advertising message and its contemporary reinterpretation. By blending nostalgia for an advertising icon, street energy, and the poetic chaos of collage, Lasveguix repurposes an everyday symbol, transforming it into an art object. The work plays on contrasts: between graphic cleanliness and urban wear, between smooth imagery and fragmented textures, between collective memory and artistic reappropriation. With this dynamic and expressive composition, Lasveguix places La Vache qui Rit at the heart of his universe: a space where pop culture, street culture and creation meet and reinvent themselves.
€290,00
Lasveguix Marianne Obey Urban Wall
Marianne Obey Urban Wall is a vibrant urban artwork by Lasveguix , combining collage, superimposed torn posters, and iconic iconography. At the center of the composition appears the figure of Marianne, inspired by Obey's graphic style, surrounded by floral motifs and positioned against a tricolor background of blue, white, and red. The republican inscription “Liberty, Equality, Fraternity” runs vertically across the work, reinforcing the piece's symbolic significance. Around this central figure, Lasveguix constructs a living wall made of torn posters, tags, bursts of color, and irregular textures. The successive layers reveal a dialogue between order and chaos, between official message and popular expression. Fragments of typography, traces of paint, and graphic symbols lend the whole a raw, energetic, and decidedly street art aesthetic. By merging an icon of French identity with contemporary urban aesthetics, the artist creates a work that questions public space, citizenship, and the visual power of symbols. Marianne Obey Urban Wall thus asserts a strong identity: that of a wall that speaks, that lives, and that carries both memory and modernity.
€1.400,00
Lasveguix Lost Invader
This work of Lasveguix embraces a raw urban aesthetic, somewhere between collage, repurposing, and graffiti. The background is made up of successive layers of torn-off posters, typographic fragments, and advertising images reminiscent of the city's saturated walls, bearers of overlapping visual memories. In the center, a black and white visual takes up the iconography of the famous video game Space Invaders , accompanied by the word "LOST", reinforcing the idea of disappearance or wandering in the urban visual chaos. Above, a graffiti in thick and spontaneous black letters announces "INVADER WAS HERE", a direct nod to the street artist Invader and his practice of marking territory with his mosaics. A blue halo in the background highlights the inscription, as if to give it a particular aura, while the torn colors and textures of the posters contribute to the palimpsest effect. The work questions traces, memory, and ephemerality in public spaces: what is glued, covered, scratched, and then reappropriated. It creates tension between popular culture (video games, street art) and the poetic decomposition of city walls.
€1.400,00
Lasveguix Urban Girl
Urban Girl is an ode to femininity amidst urban chaos. A young woman's face, with an almost photographic intensity, emerges from a swirl of color, torn posters, and ripped textures. The shreds of paper, in vivid shades of blue, pink, and gold, overlap like layers of the city's memory, creating a tension between fragility and power. The closed gaze and the expression of the figure suggest abandonment, a breath, as if she were offering herself a moment of intimacy in the tumult of the outside world. The background, marked by graffiti and scribbled words—“I love you”—inscribes this feminine presence in the raw energy of the street, somewhere between an intimate declaration and a public cry. With Urban Girl , Lasveguix captures the fleeting beauty hidden within the scoured walls and colorful ruins of our cities. The work thus becomes a portrait that is both poetic and wild, where the city and the intimate merge into a single vibration.
€1.300,00