
Gauntlet Gallery — D*Face Print Index
Warhol
Summary
"Warhol" is a 2005 Pictures On Walls screenprint in a signed and numbered edition of 250, at 50 x 70 cm. Released in Orange and Pink colourways, it directly invokes Andy Warhol, folding Pop Art's founding figure into D*Face's own vocabulary of appropriated icons and consumer imagery.
Why It Matters
By naming and depicting Warhol, D*Face acknowledges the Pop Art lineage his practice extends and critiques. The multiple colourways echo Warhol's own serial, variant-driven output, making the homage formally self-aware. As a 2005 Pictures On Walls edition, it is an early, foundational statement of his artistic references.
Collector Perspective
At an edition of 250 with additional colourways, this is one of the more available early D*Face prints, so colourway preference and condition drive collector choices. The 50 x 70 cm sheet's margins and the evenness of the flat colour fields are worth inspecting. Signed and numbered status, plus the specific Orange or Pink variant, define each example.
Historical Context
Andy Warhol is the presiding figure of Pop Art, and his serial colour variations directly inform how street artists like D*Face approach editions. Pictures On Walls issued this in 2005 during the movement's ascent. Releasing a work in multiple colourways is a Warholian gesture D*Face adopts throughout his practice.
FAQ
What colourways exist?
It was released in Orange and Pink, with the source noting further colour options were planned.
How large is the edition?
It is a signed and numbered edition of 250, one of his more available early prints.
Who is the subject?
Andy Warhol, the founding figure of Pop Art whose serial, variant-driven method D*Face echoes.
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.