
Gauntlet Gallery — D*Face Print Index
Till Death Do Us (P)art
Summary
Till Death Do Us (P)art is a 2016 seven-colour hand-pulled screen print by D*Face, published by StreetArtNews in an edition of 50. Printed on Hahnemühle 300gsm paper at 70 x 50cm, it is signed and numbered. The small edition and the artist's wordplay on marriage vows make it a focused collector's piece.
Why It Matters
An edition of 50 is notably tight, and the Hahnemühle 300gsm stock is a premium archival paper favoured for fine-art printing. The punning title, splicing wedding vows with the word art, exemplifies D*Face's love-and-death crossover, while the StreetArtNews publication ties it to a well-known street-art platform.
Collector Perspective
Fifty copies gives this real scarcity relative to the artist's larger runs, and the seven-colour hand-pulled process on Hahnemühle paper signals quality craftsmanship. The wordplay-driven title is memorable and thematically central. Signature, numbering and the archival stock are the authentication cues to check.
Historical Context
The title fuses the marriage vow till death do us part with the word art, marrying romance and mortality, two of D*Face's recurring poles. Published by StreetArtNews in 2016, it reflects the artist's continued engagement with street-art media outlets that helped build his collector base.
FAQ
How small is the edition?
The edition is 50, one of the tighter runs in this group.
What paper is used?
It is printed on Hahnemühle 300gsm paper, a premium archival stock.
How many colours?
It is a seven-colour hand-pulled screen print.
Who published it?
StreetArtNews published the print in 2016.
About the Artist
D*Face is the working name of Dean Stockton (born 1978, London), a British street artist and a leading figure in the UK urban-contemporary scene. Drawing on comic books, pop art, skate graphics, and consumer iconography, he developed a signature cast of characters — winged "D*Dog" motifs, skull-faced pin-ups, and subverted Americana — rendered in bold, Lichtenstein-indebted lines. From stickers and street work in the early 2000s, he built a substantial studio practice of paintings, sculpture, and signed prints, founded the StolenSpace Gallery in London, and has collaborated widely across music and fashion.
Collecting D*Face at Gauntlet Gallery
Which D*Face works should I collect?
His signed, numbered screenprints — especially hand-finished and low-edition works — are the collectible core, prized for bold pop imagery. Look for clean condition and the artist's signature. Gauntlet Gallery prioritizes complete, well-documented impressions.
How is a D*Face piece authenticated?
We sell his works with documented provenance and the edition's signature and numbering. Each piece is photographed as-is, including signature and edition details, so you can verify before purchase.
What drives value?
Edition size, hand-embellishment, iconic imagery, condition, and provenance all shape value. Low-numbered, hand-finished, and larger works command the strongest premiums.