artists

• Laurie Anderson
• Phyllis Bramson
• Brad Brown
• John Buck
• Tom Burckhardt
• Kathy Butterly
• Enrique Chagoya
• Bernard Cohen
• Roy De Forest
• Donna Dennis
• Rafael Ferrer
• Elliott Green
• Red Grooms
• Susan Hall
• Jane Hammond
• Don Ed Hardy
- "Big Top"
- "Chaperone"
- "Floater - State II"
- "Floater"
- "Free Range & Howboy"
- "Frontier Justice"
- "Nurse Mercy"
- "Our Gang - State II"
- "Our Gang"
- "Prince Buster"
- "Raging Chi"
- "Rosie"
- "Sea Dragon"
- "Shark's 25th Anniversary"
- "Storm Dragon"
- "Surf Naked"
- "Tattoo Seas Shark"
- "Tweeter's Recovery"
- "Valley Girl"
- "Wave Warrior"
• Ana Maria Hernando
• Robert Hudson
• Yvonne Jacquette
• Luis Jiménez
• Roberto Juarez
• Susanne Kühn
• Robert Kushner
• Li Lin Lee
• Hung Liu
• Kara Maria
• Hiroki Morinoue
• Miho Morinoue
• John Newman
• Manuel Ocampo
• Janis Provisor
• Jeera Rattanangkoon
• Rex Ray
• Jim Ringley
• Peter Saul
• Italo Scanga
• Hollis Sigler
• Stacey Steers
• James Surls
• Barbara Takenaga
• Emmi Whitehorse
• William T. Wiley
• Betty Woodman
• Thomas Woodruff
contact us

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paw


Don Ed Hardy : "Frontier Justice": 1995
Color lithograph : 30 x 22" : Ed. 30 : Price on request

 



Hardy states: "I was going for the look of a 19th century ‘wanted’ poster or advertisement. The limited color scheme of red and black, a homage to the severe (and difficult) simplified flash style of Bert Grimm, my first mentor in tattooing. The composition echoes 1920’s ‘back piece’ designs that were derived from lodge emblems, proclamations, etc. The skull cowboy is a direct take from a 1930’s Cap Coleman (Norfolk) design. It is paired with a Sailor Jerry stylized geisha. These represent my father and stepmother (married in 1953 Occupation era Tokyo, she a secretary 27 years his junior). His obsession with Zane Grey stories led him to leave his English home at the age of 17 and work as a cowboy in the 1920’s in upper Alberta. He has maintained a lifelong romance with the Old West, and continues to wear cowboy hats and boots. The broken arrow is for the trust he destroyed with various wives around the world. The kewpies are representative of the unknown number of children fathered in his travels (That’s me on lower left with palette and brushes). The camera at the base of the heart represents his photography profession. A traditional Japanese dragon supports the entire construction, which includes a Hiroshima blast at top center, and the Enola Gay flying away (my stepmother is from Hiroshima prefecture). The international “No Babies” symbol at the heart center is my contribution to stop global overpopulation, our most pressing issue."