2025

Satoshi White Paper - Poster 9/21
Acrylic paint & gold leaf on canvas
50x70cm - 2025
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Gallery price : 930 $
Studio price : 630 $
"Whitepaper #9" captures the eternal battle of market sentiment—bear vs. bull—etched directly onto Bitcoin’s founding document. Bold, stylized, and almost mythological, the two beasts clash in the center of Satoshi Nakamoto’s whitepaper, turning this sacred crypto text into a battleground. Their fight overlays market volatility onto protocol stability, a visual reminder that Bitcoin persists beyond emotion and speculation. It’s instinct versus code. Fear versus conviction.
Satoshi White Paper - Poster 7/21
Acrylic paint & gold leaf on canvas
50x70cm - 2025


"Whitepaper #7" fuses Satoshi's vision with a defiant libertarian symbol—the coiled snake from the Gadsden flag, now wrapped around a blazing Bitcoin. Set atop the full Bitcoin whitepaper, this artwork reclaims the revolutionary roots of crypto. The phrase “DON’T TREAD ON ME” anchors the composition, delivering a clear warning: sovereignty is non-negotiable. Splashes of red echo civil resistance, while faded ₿ signs hint at ideological saturation. Bitcoin isn’t just a protocol here—it’s a declaration of independence.

Trust
Acrylic paint, spray & glitters on canvas
120x150cm - 2025
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Gallery price : 11130 $
Studio price : 6130 $
This painting is a direct reinterpretation of Shepard Fairey’s iconic "HOPE" poster created for Barack Obama in 2008. Here, the artist replaces the political figure with another mythical and elusive character: Satoshi Nakamoto, the creator of Bitcoin. The word "HOPE" becomes "TRUST" — a shift in meaning that carries serious weight. While Obama’s poster sold hope through a political campaign, this artwork evokes a far more radical promise: that of a decentralized, transparent, and tamper-proof monetary system. Choosing Satoshi Nakamoto is no accident. Nobody knows who he really is, but his invention — Bitcoin — is built around a single core value: trust without intermediaries, encoded directly into the protocol. It’s not about believing in a person or an institution: it’s about trusting code, a network, an idea.