
Gauntlet Gallery — Invader Print Index
Oh... Alright
Summary
Oh... Alright is a 2011 six-color silkscreen from Pictures On Walls, embossed on 310gsm archival paper, signed and numbered in an edition of 150 at 58 x 59 cm. Its title and comic-panel styling nod to Roy Lichtenstein's Pop language.
Why It Matters
The piece connects Invader's pixel aesthetic to Pop Art's comic-strip roots, echoing Lichtenstein's speech-bubble works. As one of his larger and more colorful POW editions, it fuses fine-art reference with his invasion iconography, showing how his practice converses with twentieth-century Pop canon.
Collector Perspective
At 150 copies it is one of the more available Invader POW prints, making it an accessible entry into a signed, embossed, six-color work. The larger near-square format has strong wall presence. The Lichtenstein reference broadens its appeal; verify the emboss and archival stock are crisp and undamaged.
Historical Context
Released in 2011 by Pictures On Walls, Oh... Alright arrived during Invader's peak print-output years. The title's comic-book cadence situates it within street art's long dialogue with Pop Art, a lineage POW's roster frequently referenced through appropriation and homage.
FAQ
What does the title reference?
The comic-panel phrasing and styling evoke Roy Lichtenstein's Pop Art speech-bubble paintings.
How many colors is it?
A six-color silkscreen with an embossed design on 310gsm archival paper.
What is the edition size?
150 signed and numbered copies, published by Pictures On Walls in 2011.
About the Artist
Invader (born 1969, France) is a pseudonymous French urban artist known for installing mosaic works inspired by 1970s-80s arcade video games, most famously the aliens from Space Invaders. Since the late 1990s he has "invaded" cities worldwide, cementing tile mosaics onto walls and mapping each installation as part of a global game. His studio output extends the pixel aesthetic into prints, "Rubikcubism" works made from Rubik's Cubes, aluminum pieces, and alias-signed editions. He remains anonymous, appearing publicly only masked.
Collecting Invader at Gauntlet Gallery
What Invader works can I collect?
Beyond street mosaics, Invader releases signed, numbered editions — screenprints, giclées, aluminum and Rubikcubism works — plus his "Invasion Kits." Signed and numbered studio editions are the collectible core. Gauntlet Gallery focuses on complete, well-preserved impressions with documentation.
How is an Invader piece authenticated?
We sell Invader works with documented provenance and the edition's signature and numbering. Each piece is photographed exactly as it ships, including signature and edition details, so you can verify before buying.
What drives value?
Medium (unique Rubikcubism and aluminum works over open prints), edition size, iconic imagery, condition, and provenance all shape price. Hand-made and low-numbered pieces command the strongest premiums.