Vivienne Westwood - “Rebel Royalty”

£5,500.00
Limited Availability

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

Built from appropriated street and fashion posters, spray paint, ink, stencils and layered halftone portrait work.
The surface has been torn back, rebuilt and disrupted to mirror the energy of rebellion itself — nothing polished, nothing safe. Every mark sits somewhere between destruction and creation.

Westwood’s image has lived many lives, punk icon, activist, designer, provocateur.
But beneath the headlines was someone who challenged systems, rewrote rules and refused to conform to expectation.

The neon crown represents earned status, not inherited power.
In graffiti culture, a crown marks respect, given by impact, not position.

“Rebel Royalty” celebrates defiance as identity.
Not fashion as trend, but fashion as protest. Not rebellion for spectacle, but rebellion as purpose.

Look closely and you’ll find fragments of cultural history embedded within the layers — references that emerge slowly as the surface reveals itself over time.

This piece is about disruption, independence and the legacy of those who change the conversation rather than follow it.

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

Built from appropriated street and fashion posters, spray paint, ink, stencils and layered halftone portrait work.
The surface has been torn back, rebuilt and disrupted to mirror the energy of rebellion itself — nothing polished, nothing safe. Every mark sits somewhere between destruction and creation.

Westwood’s image has lived many lives, punk icon, activist, designer, provocateur.
But beneath the headlines was someone who challenged systems, rewrote rules and refused to conform to expectation.

The neon crown represents earned status, not inherited power.
In graffiti culture, a crown marks respect, given by impact, not position.

“Rebel Royalty” celebrates defiance as identity.
Not fashion as trend, but fashion as protest. Not rebellion for spectacle, but rebellion as purpose.

Look closely and you’ll find fragments of cultural history embedded within the layers — references that emerge slowly as the surface reveals itself over time.

This piece is about disruption, independence and the legacy of those who change the conversation rather than follow it.