Skip to main content
Wescover has transitioned to an inquiry only platform.
Please refer to
our FAQs for more details.
Customizable
"10th and Harrison st." | Oil And Acrylic Painting in Paintings by dOTS. Item composed of synthetic
Satisfaction Guarantee
Customize this piece
"10th and Harrison st." | Oil And Acrylic Painting in Paintings by dOTS. Item composed of synthetic
"10th and Harrison st." | Oil And Acrylic Painting in Paintings by dOTS. Item composed of synthetic

Created and Sold by dOTS

dOTS

"10th and Harrison st." - Paintings

$ On Inquiry

"10th and Harrison st." is an acrylic painting I did in 2016. It belongs to a series of 10 acrylics I did between 2015 and 2016. The whole concept was "walking the bay". Exploration and discovering was everything. Murals, graffiti, street art in general. This particular corner is located in Oakland's Chinatown. A beautiful neighborhood filled with incredible street art. You can find lots of dragon murals and I would love to sit there and look at them. Learning about them.

Item "10th and Harrison st."
Created by dOTS
As seen in Private Residence, San Francisco, CA
Have more questions about this item?
dOTS
Meet the Creator
Wescover creator since 2019
dyslexia Of The System

5 years ago I made a decision about my life. I wanted to become an Artist. My life was going in the wrong direction so I needed to listen to my soul and spend some time with my most inner self. During a time in which happiness and serenity seemed like an unachievable goal I found art. It saved my life because it connected me with my most vulnerable self. It showed me how to communicate with myself. It was not easy, I did not know how to create art. I did not know how to talk with colors. So I experimented with different ideas and concepts. I quickly understood that the Bay Area, where I currently live, was a great part of my creative process. I needed to go to explore it to find new alleyways filled with stickers, graffiti and murals. Hills and steps everywhere, and the most inspiring views of the city as if it were to reinvent itself effortlessly. This process became an obsession. It seemed like for the first time there were no wrong turns. Everyday I went out there, I found something special to admire. Something to let go of my mind. Coming back home to paint and recreate that incredible “urban creativity” was a natural process. It felt like the right path to take.