
Hey Ya Art Print
Hey Ya is a portrait-format graphic work by Berlin-based contemporary artist Nico Tracey — a collision of type, color, and rhythm that reads more like a visual shout than a static image. The composition is deliberately off-balance, with letterforms pushed to the edges and bold color fields cutting through the frame. Tracey draws from both print culture and fine art, and this piece reflects that dual sensibility: the layout feels designed, but the energy is painterly. It belongs to a body of work that treats language as raw material — something to be arranged, weighted, and felt as much as read.
On canvas, the flat graphic planes of Tracey's work take on a new physicality — the woven texture adds depth beneath each color field, giving the canvas art print a presence that a flat paper print simply cannot match.
Original: $38.34
-65%$38.34
$13.42More Images






Hey Ya Art Print
Hey Ya is a portrait-format graphic work by Berlin-based contemporary artist Nico Tracey — a collision of type, color, and rhythm that reads more like a visual shout than a static image. The composition is deliberately off-balance, with letterforms pushed to the edges and bold color fields cutting through the frame. Tracey draws from both print culture and fine art, and this piece reflects that dual sensibility: the layout feels designed, but the energy is painterly. It belongs to a body of work that treats language as raw material — something to be arranged, weighted, and felt as much as read.
On canvas, the flat graphic planes of Tracey's work take on a new physicality — the woven texture adds depth beneath each color field, giving the canvas art print a presence that a flat paper print simply cannot match.
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Description
Hey Ya is a portrait-format graphic work by Berlin-based contemporary artist Nico Tracey — a collision of type, color, and rhythm that reads more like a visual shout than a static image. The composition is deliberately off-balance, with letterforms pushed to the edges and bold color fields cutting through the frame. Tracey draws from both print culture and fine art, and this piece reflects that dual sensibility: the layout feels designed, but the energy is painterly. It belongs to a body of work that treats language as raw material — something to be arranged, weighted, and felt as much as read.
On canvas, the flat graphic planes of Tracey's work take on a new physicality — the woven texture adds depth beneath each color field, giving the canvas art print a presence that a flat paper print simply cannot match.























