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Walken

Walken

$1,800.00Price

CHRISTOPHER WALKEN - Original Drawing

 

 

Pen, ink, and acrylic on artist's childhood drawing (created age 7) Mounted on wood panel, ready to hang 9x12

Signed by artist

 

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This piece is drawn on a piece of paper I created when I was 7 years old.

 

I've held onto it for 40 years, waiting for the right subject.

 

Christopher Walken was a match. The charisma, off-beat humor, it fit. 

 

This is a collaboration across time: the child who loved to create meets the master who never stopped.

 

 

"I got a fever... and the only prescription is more cowbell."

 

This piece was created as part of my "Icons in Their Own Voice" series, where I draw celebrities while performing impressions of them. The creation process was documented on YouTube and viewed by 1,200+ people in the first 24 hours.

 

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THE WORK

 

Pen and ink crosshatch creates the foundation—thousands of lines building form, shadow, dimension.

 

Acrylic splashes with vintage collage text add color and energy—a playful field of intrest.

 

The substrate (my childhood drawing) adds a layer of meaning: this isn't just about  Walken. It's about the boy who loved drawing meeting the artist who never stopped.

 

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ONE OF A KIND

 

This piece cannot be recreated. The substrate is a singular artifact from 1984. When it's gone, it's gone.

 

Some pieces you make to sell.

 

Some pieces you make because they need to exist.

 

This is the second kind.

 

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ACQUISITION

 

$1,800

 

Payment plans available:

- 3 months: $600/month

- 6 months: $300/month

 

To inquire or purchase:

📧 jke@justinkaneelder.com

 

Certificate of authenticity included.

Professional shipping available.

 

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ABOUT THE ARTIST

 

Justin Kane Elder is a multidisciplinary artist based in Richmond, Indiana, preparing for his first museum retrospective at the Richmond Art Museum (June 2026).

 

From professional snowboarder to near-paralysis to building Electric Coffin (a 7-figure creative studio) to starting over—his work explores themes of legacy, transformation, nostalgia, and the collision of past and present.

 

This piece will be included in considerations for the Richmond retrospective.

 

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"Some substrates you save for 40 years. This was one of them."

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