DEATH NYC Peanuts Snoopy Starry Night Dreams Wings Signed Ltd Ed Print COA: Collector Guide — What It Is, What It Is Worth
Two legends collide in a single 18×13-inch sheet: Vincent van Gogh’s The Starry Night — the swirling, fever-dream canvas painted in an asylum in 1889 — and Charles M. Schulz’s Snoopy, arguably the most beloved dog in the history of American pop culture. The anonymous street artist known as DEATH NYC has fused them into something that is simultaneously funny, melancholy, and surprisingly profound. This is a hand-signed limited edition print, edition of 50–100 copies, accompanied by a gold embossed Certificate of Authenticity (COA) card, and retailing at $100. For collectors sitting at the crossroads of fine art history and childhood nostalgia, it is a rare value proposition.
The Cultural Collision
Van Gogh’s Starry Night depicts a churning midnight sky above a quiet village — a work now so ubiquitous it appears on everything from coffee mugs to university dorm-room walls, yet still carries genuine emotional weight. Schulz’s Snoopy, meanwhile, spent decades atop his red doghouse dreaming of aerial adventures as the World War I flying ace, his beagle ears flapping in imagined wind. DEATH NYC’s genius here is recognizing that both icons live in the same psychological space: the mind retreating into fantasy to escape an overwhelming world.
In this print, Snoopy is rendered against van Gogh’s iconic turbulent sky, wings spread in flight through those electric blue and gold brushstroke currents. The effect is visually striking because the thick impasto style of post-Impressionism and the clean cartoon linework of Schulz should not coexist — and yet they do, with an almost dreamlike coherence. The title word “Dreams” is not incidental; it frames the entire image as an act of imagination, which is exactly what both source works represent. The collision carries emotional weight beyond mere novelty: it asks what happens when the anxious genius meets the carefree dreamer, and answers that they fly together.
Death NYC: The Artist
DEATH NYC is an anonymous street artist who began producing work around 2010–2012, primarily in New York City. The identity behind the moniker has never been publicly confirmed, in keeping with the tradition of artists like Banksy who use anonymity to separate the work from the celebrity. The artistic lineage is clear: Banksy’s subversive placement of high-art imagery in commercial contexts, Andy Warhol’s elevation of consumer iconography to gallery status, and Jean-Michel Basquiat’s raw collision of street culture with art-world symbols all inform the DEATH NYC practice. The name itself functions as commentary — New York City as a site of creative destruction, where cultural icons are killed and reborn simultaneously.
DEATH NYC works are characterized by small, tightly controlled print editions — typically 30 to 100 copies — hand-signed and hand-dated by the artist. The subjects are almost always borrowed from the intersection of luxury fashion (Louis Vuitton, Chanel, Supreme), mass-media characters (Disney, Peanuts, anime), and canonical fine art (Monet, Munch, van Gogh), scrambled into combinations that force the viewer to reconsider the cultural value assigned to each. The prints are sold at accessible price points intentionally: DEATH NYC positions limited-edition street art as a democratic counterweight to the gatekept auction house market.
Edition and Authentication
This specific print measures 18×13 inches on premium heavyweight archival stock. The edition size is 50–100 copies. Each print is hand-signed and hand-dated by DEATH NYC in pencil or marker, and individually hand-numbered (e.g., 12/75). The accompanying COA card carries a gold embossed seal — this is the primary authentication marker, and it matters: authentic seals are physically raised, not flat-printed. Run your fingernail across the gold circle; a genuine embossed seal has tactile relief that a photocopy or counterfeit will not replicate. The COA card also records the title, edition size, and artist name. These three elements together — hand signature, hand numbering, and embossed COA — constitute the complete authentication chain for Death NYC prints.
Why Collectors Buy This
The cross-collector appeal of this particular print is unusually broad. Peanuts collectors are a dedicated, multigenerational base who actively seek licensed and fine-art-adjacent Snoopy imagery. Van Gogh enthusiasts and post-Impressionist fans are drawn to the respectful yet irreverent treatment of Starry Night. Street art and contemporary print collectors follow DEATH NYC specifically for the cultural-collision formula. And entry-level art investors — buyers who want exposure to the limited-edition print market without committing to four-figure price points — find the $100 retail price a genuinely accessible entry point.
The appreciation dynamics for DEATH NYC prints are well-documented within the collector community. Popular motifs in editions of 30–75 regularly trade at 2–5x their original retail price within 12–24 months of release, particularly those featuring instantly recognizable icon pairings. The Snoopy + van Gogh combination sits squarely in that category. At $100, this print represents some of the lowest risk, highest-nostalgia street art available today. Comparable DEATH NYC prints featuring Disney characters or luxury brand collisions have sold on the secondary market for $200–$500 within two years of release. This print’s dual appeal — beloved cartoon character, beloved painting — positions it well for similar appreciation.
FAQ
Is this Death NYC print authenticated?
Yes. Every copy comes with a gold embossed COA card. The seal is physically raised — run a fingernail across it to confirm. The print is also hand-signed, hand-dated, and individually hand-numbered by the artist.
How many copies of this Death NYC print exist?
The edition size is 50–100 copies. Your individual copy is hand-numbered (e.g., 12/75), confirming the exact edition on the face of the print. No additional copies are produced once the edition closes.
What is this Death NYC print worth?
Retail is $100. Secondary market data on comparable DEATH NYC icon-collision prints shows 2–5x appreciation within 12–24 months. Prints in this category have sold for $200–$500 on resale platforms. Past performance does not guarantee future results, but the dual pop-culture + fine-art appeal here is among the stronger appreciation setups in the accessible street art segment.
Browse all Death NYC prints and limited edition street art at gauntlet.gallery/collections/all.