The Art and Influence of Hip Hop

The Art and Influence of Hip Hop

View full screen - View 1 of Lot 71. Original miniature of a graffitied New York City ice box, signed.

Danny Cortes

Original miniature of a graffitied New York City ice box, signed

Lot Closed

March 30, 05:10 PM GMT

Estimate

1,000 - 1,500 USD

Lot Details

Description

Mixed media model of an icebox in miniature on a custom-made stand executed in acrylic, foam core, chipboard, paper collage, wash, plastic and enamel paint, the icebox signed and dated to the underside "Danny Cortes 2022" ; the stand signed at lower center "Daniel Cortes 2022", the icebox 6 by 4¼ by 3 in. (15.25 x 11 x 7.6 cm.), overall dimensions including stand: 9¼ by 8 by 6½ in. (23.5 x 20 x 16.5 cm.).

MINIATURE OF GRAFFITIED ICE BOX RECALLS NEW YORK CITY AND 90S HIP HOP  


Brooklyn-based artist Danny Cortes creates intricate miniatures of iconic New York City places and objects that speak to a loving nostalgia for the artist's own childhood haunts and the early 1990s. What began as a creative hobby during the COVID-19 pandemic soon became a way to share the vanishing version of his beloved city with a wider audience thanks to social media. His miniatures include mailboxes, lampposts, Mister Softee trucks handball courts, newsstands, storefronts, and as represented in the current lot, the iconic New York City bodega icebox.


Noticing the omnipresent details of urban life all around him and bringing them lovingly to life in his 'toys for adults', Cortes now has a dedicated legion of fans and collectors including sports stars, Hip Hop artists, and—in true hometown fashion—New York City natives who crave a walk down memory lane.


Provenance:

The Artist


Condition Report:

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