Details
Artist
Styles
Painted cast vinyl - Incised ©KAWS..07 and MEDICOM TOY 2007 MADE IN CHINA (on the underside) // KAWS's "Four Foot Companion" in brown is a monumental painted cast vinyl sculpture standing 126 centimeters tall. The figure presents the artist's signature Companion character with its skull-like face featuring crossed-out eyes and bulbous gray ear-like protrusions. The brown colorway with cream-toned hands and face creates a subdued yet commanding presence. Produced by Medicom Toy in 2007, this large-scale edition exemplifies KAWS's ability to bridge the worlds of fine art and designer toy culture, transforming cartoon-derived iconography into collectible sculptural objects with broad cultural resonance.
Four Foot Companion - Brown, 2007
form
Medium
Size
126 x 55.9 X 33 cm
- Inches
- Centimeters
Edition
Price
Details
Artist
Styles
Painted cast vinyl - Incised ©KAWS..07 and MEDICOM TOY 2007 MADE IN CHINA (on the underside) // KAWS's "Four Foot Companion" in brown is a monumental painted cast vinyl sculpture standing 126 centimeters tall. The figure presents the artist's signature Companion character with its skull-like face featuring crossed-out eyes and bulbous gray ear-like protrusions. The brown colorway with cream-toned hands and face creates a subdued yet commanding presence. Produced by Medicom Toy in 2007, this large-scale edition exemplifies KAWS's ability to bridge the worlds of fine art and designer toy culture, transforming cartoon-derived iconography into collectible sculptural objects with broad cultural resonance.
- Recently Added
- Price (low-high )
- Price (high-low )
- Year (low-high )
- Year (high-low )
What is Street art?
Street Art is artwork created and executed in public spaces, outside of traditional art venues. It gained popularity during the 1980s graffiti art boom and has since evolved into various forms and styles. Common forms of Street Art include pop-up art, sticker art, stencil graffiti, and street installations or sculptures. Terms like guerrilla art, neo-graffiti, post-graffiti, and urban art are often used interchangeably to describe this genre, which challenges conventional ideas about where and how art should be displayed.
