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Love, Forever
2026
Love, Forever is a large scale mixed media work on paper by Brooklyn based artist Kozo, created using tattoo ink applied with a coil tattoo machine in his signature process. The composition features a photorealistic pencil rendering of two classical marble figures tenderly embracing, overlaid with small colorful Keith Haring style dancing figures in green, blue, orange, and yellow scattered throughout. At the center, the two figures cradle a bold red radiating sacred heart rendered in vibrant tattoo ink, creating a striking tension between classical antiquity and contemporary street art iconography. This work belongs to Kozo's Nostalgia series, which weaves together childhood cultural references and classical art traditions, and is presented as edition 1 of 15 in a custom frame.
- Medium
- Mixed media
- Dimensions
- Edition
- 1 of 15
- Signed
- Yes
- List Price
- $18,500
- Spotted At
- Artist Studio · Kozo Art
Notes
Kozo is based in a private studio in Brooklyn. He pioneers colored micro-realistic tattoos and translates his designs onto traditional canvases and marble sculptures using a coil tattoo machine with the needle integrated into the piece itself. His work is exhibited in galleries worldwide. The Nostalgia series interwines toys and childhood nostalgia with classical art. The work features small Keith Haring style figures in blue, green, orange, and yellow scattered throughout the composition alongside a central bold red radiating heart.
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Artists in conversation

Hiroshi Sugimoto
Japanese · b. 1948

Sugimoto shares Kozo's deeply meditative engagement with time, impermanence, and Zen influenced minimalism, creating works where process and material restraint carry philosophical weight. Both artists work at the intersection of Eastern contemplative tradition and Western conceptual frameworks using spare, refined aesthetics.

Richard Long
British · b. 1945

Long's practice of using natural materials such as mud, stone, and earth applied directly to paper and walls mirrors Kozo's reverence for raw natural substances and meditative process. Both artists foreground the philosophical and tactile relationship between human action and elemental materials.

Cy Twombly
American · b. 1928

Twombly's works on paper share Kozo's interest in mark making as a contemplative and almost calligraphic act, with surfaces that feel both ancient and immediate. His sparse gestural language and reverence for the silence between marks parallel Kozo's wabi sabi inflected minimalism.
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