STEVIE NICKS - “Silver Springs”

£5,500.00
🔴SOLD OUT

4ft x 4ft (122 × 122 cm)
Original Decollage on Cradled Wood Panel (7.5 cm)
Light Blue Neon Dripping Crown

This piece is built from ripped street posters, music print fragments, graffiti layers, spray paint and halftone portrait work. The surface has been worked back and forward, torn, covered, revealed again — so the history sits in the texture. Nothing is smooth or untouched. It’s meant to feel lived with.

Stevie Nicks has always stood apart.
Not loud. Not forced. Just presence.
The kind of identity that doesn’t need to explain itself.
The neon crown marks that.
In graffiti culture, a crown is earned, not self-declared.
Stevie earned hers through influence, longevity and the way her voice carries memory.

Look closely and you’ll find fragments linked to her music, her era, and the emotional weight she carried through it.
Some details are clear straight away.
Others reveal themselves slowly - the longer the work is around you, the more it gives back.

This artwork is no longer available.
It remains here in the archive as part of the ongoing record of icons who shaped culture - not just sound.

4ft x 4ft (122 × 122 cm)
Original Decollage on Cradled Wood Panel (7.5 cm)
Light Blue Neon Dripping Crown

This piece is built from ripped street posters, music print fragments, graffiti layers, spray paint and halftone portrait work. The surface has been worked back and forward, torn, covered, revealed again — so the history sits in the texture. Nothing is smooth or untouched. It’s meant to feel lived with.

Stevie Nicks has always stood apart.
Not loud. Not forced. Just presence.
The kind of identity that doesn’t need to explain itself.
The neon crown marks that.
In graffiti culture, a crown is earned, not self-declared.
Stevie earned hers through influence, longevity and the way her voice carries memory.

Look closely and you’ll find fragments linked to her music, her era, and the emotional weight she carried through it.
Some details are clear straight away.
Others reveal themselves slowly - the longer the work is around you, the more it gives back.

This artwork is no longer available.
It remains here in the archive as part of the ongoing record of icons who shaped culture - not just sound.