Snoopy and Woodstock on Louis Vuitton House with Graffiti Hearts - Pop Art: Collector Guide - What It Is, What It Is Worth
The Gauntlet Journal

Snoopy and Woodstock on Louis Vuitton House with Graffiti Hearts - Pop Art: Collector Guide - What It Is, What It Is Worth

June 13, 2026

Snoopy and Woodstock on Louis Vuitton House with Graffiti Hearts - Pop Art: Collector Guide - What It Is, What It Is Worth

Few street art prints land at the intersection of childhood nostalgia, high fashion, and raw urban energy the way this one does. Death NYC's Snoopy and Woodstock on Louis Vuitton House with Graffiti Hearts places Charles Schulz's beloved Peanuts characters — Snoopy and his loyal sidekick Woodstock — against a backdrop drenched in Louis Vuitton's unmistakable LV monogram pattern, while graffiti hearts explode across the composition in the full, unapologetic language of New York street art. This is a hand-signed limited edition Death NYC print, produced in an edition of 50-100 copies, measuring 18x13 inches on premium stock, and retailing at $100 — complete with the artist's gold embossed Certificate of Authenticity.

The Cultural Collision

Death NYC is a master of forced proximity — taking symbols that belong to entirely different worlds and locking them in the same frame until the friction becomes meaning. In this print, three distinct visual languages crash together with deliberate force. Snoopy and Woodstock carry sixty-plus years of American pop-culture warmth: they are wholesome, universally recognized, and almost aggressively innocent. The Louis Vuitton house — rendered in the brand's signature brown-and-gold LV monogram — imports the language of aspirational luxury, status signaling, and conspicuous consumption. The graffiti hearts overlay both with the raw, democratic energy of street culture, the kind of mark that gets painted on walls without asking permission.

The visual result is immediately striking. Snoopy's round, cartoonish form contrasted against the precision of the LV pattern creates an almost surrealist tension. The graffiti hearts — loose, expressive, unpolished — cut through the locked-in prestige of both the Peanuts franchise and the Louis Vuitton brand. Death NYC is asking a question the print doesn't answer directly: who actually owns culture? The child watching Saturday morning cartoons, the luxury consumer buying a monogram bag, or the anonymous writer leaving a heart on a wall? That open question is exactly why collectors keep coming back to this artist.

Death NYC: The Artist

Death NYC is an anonymous street artist who began working around 2010-2012, based in New York City. The artist's identity remains deliberately concealed, placing the work in the tradition of Banksy — where anonymity becomes part of the statement. Influenced visibly by Banksy's subversive politics, Warhol's appropriation of consumer imagery, and Basquiat's layered street-meets-fine-art sensibility, Death NYC operates in the overlap between all three. The work is fundamentally about consumption: how we consume media, how media consumes us, and how luxury brands, cartoon characters, and celebrity images all circulate through the same cultural pipeline.

Unlike Banksy, who works predominantly in public space, Death NYC channels the same commentary into collectible limited edition prints distributed through galleries worldwide. This makes the work both accessible and collectable — the prints are priced for entry-level collectors but produced in small enough editions to carry genuine scarcity value. Each print is personally hand-signed and hand-dated by the artist, maintaining a direct connection between the anonymous creator and the physical object.

Edition and Authentication

This print was produced in an edition of 50 to 100 copies. Every copy is hand-signed and hand-dated by Death NYC — the artist's signature and date are applied in pencil or marker directly to the print, not pre-printed. Each piece is individually numbered within the edition run. The print measures 18x13 inches and is produced on premium archival-quality stock that holds color and detail over time.

Authentication is confirmed by the gold embossed Certificate of Authenticity card that ships with every piece. The embossed seal is physically raised from the card surface — this is the primary authentication marker. Counterfeit COA cards circulate online, but they universally fail the touch test: a printed gold seal sits flat on the paper, while an authentic embossed seal has a tactile, raised texture you can feel with your fingertip. Gauntlet Gallery sources all Death NYC inventory directly and provides a full authentication guarantee on every print sold.

Why Collectors Buy This

The cross-collector appeal of this specific print is unusually broad, which is a meaningful demand driver in the limited edition market. Peanuts has one of the longest-running and most emotionally resonant fan bases in popular culture — Snoopy and Woodstock are recognizable to collectors across every demographic and age group. Louis Vuitton is among the most recognizable luxury fashion brands in the world, with a dedicated collector base that actively seeks objects that engage with the brand's iconography. Street art and pop art collectors form the third audience — for them, the Death NYC name alone is a draw, regardless of subject matter.

When those three audiences converge on a single print with an edition size of 50-100 copies, the conditions for secondary market appreciation are strong. Popular Death NYC motifs in similarly small editions have regularly achieved 2-5x appreciation within 12 to 24 months of original retail on platforms like eBay and secondary gallery markets. At a $100 entry price, this print represents genuine street art with a signed COA and documented provenance — it is one of the most accessible ways to begin or expand a collection of authenticated limited edition works. Collectors who bought comparable Death NYC prints at retail three or four years ago have watched those pieces trade for $250-$500 in secondary sales.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is this Death NYC Snoopy and Woodstock Louis Vuitton print authenticated?
Yes. Every authentic Death NYC print ships with a gold embossed Certificate of Authenticity (COA) card. The seal is physically raised from the card surface — it cannot be reproduced by printing flat. The print is also hand-signed and hand-dated by the artist. Gauntlet Gallery stocks only verified authentic pieces sourced directly from the Death NYC distribution network.

How many copies of this Death NYC Snoopy and Woodstock print exist?
This print was produced in an edition of 50 to 100 copies. Each copy is individually numbered within that edition. Once the edition sells out, no additional copies are produced. The small edition size is a key driver of secondary-market demand for Death NYC works.

What is this Death NYC Snoopy and Woodstock Louis Vuitton print worth?
The current retail price is $100, making it one of the most accessible entry points in the Death NYC catalog. Popular Death NYC motifs in similar editions of 50-100 copies have achieved 2-5x appreciation within 12 to 24 months of release on the secondary market. As a convergence of Peanuts nostalgia, luxury brand iconography, and street art, this specific combination has broad cross-collector appeal that supports long-term demand.

Browse all Death NYC prints at Gauntlet Gallery