Free UK delivery with code FREEDEL

The Paint Was Cracking

Bugspot

£150Or own this artwork from £15 a month with interest free finance. Select Own Art at checkout.

The Paint Was Cracking, limited edition screenprint by contemporary artist duo Bugspot

 

Edition of 10

 

Size: 56cm (h) x 38cm (w)

Add FramingBuy Art

Shipping

UK unframed orders delivered within 7-10 days and framed within 21 days. International orders are despatched within 7-10 days. Please note, we only ship framed art within the UK.

Returns

If you’re not happy with your artwork, you can return it to us in original condition and packaging within 14 days for a refund. Please note, framed orders are custom-made and cannot be returned. Read our returns policy here.

Framing

Try ‘Our Pick’ for our curator’s framing recommendation. Our framing is handmade in London – learn more about framing here.

Interest Free Finance

Buy with Own Art and spread the cost over 10 months interest-free. To borrow from £100 to £2500 opt for PaybyFinance at checkout. Learn more here.

The Paint Was Cracking, limited edition screenprint by contemporary artist duo Bugspot

 

Edition of 10

 

Size: 56cm (h) x 38cm (w)

Shipping

UK unframed orders delivered within 7-10 days and framed within 21 days. International orders are despatched within 7-10 days. Please note, we only ship framed art within the UK.

Returns

If you’re not happy with your artwork, you can return it to us in original condition and packaging within 14 days for a refund. Please note, framed orders are custom-made and cannot be returned. Read our returns policy here.

Framing

Try ‘Our Pick’ for our curator’s framing recommendation. Our framing is handmade in London – learn more about framing here.

Interest Free Finance

Buy with Own Art and spread the cost over 10 months interest-free. To borrow from £100 to £2500 opt for PaybyFinance at checkout. Learn more here.

Bugspot

Bugspot is a London based Art duo of Ieva Kausteklyte and Darius Verbickas.  The idea of coming together as two individual artists in order to create and experiment with each other’s thoughts, styles and aesthetic proclivities, has proved to be a fruitful way for them to develop unique works of art. Driven by a desire to create original works in graphic techniques, they are trying to achieve the “unpredictable”. In other words, their collaboration is an attempt to direct and influence each other’s practices by engaging each other in a creative process with no preconceived idea of a final outcome. However, within the process of composition, somewhere between the inception of a concept for a particular piece of work and the last touch in its realisation, they have certain vaguely defined rules in place which help them to remain in charge of the creative process.