“Alec Monopoly” is the alias of an unidentified graffiti artist,
originally from New York City. The artist primarily works with street
art in the urban environments of New York, Los Angeles, and London using
varied materials (including stencils, spray paint, epoxies, varnishes
and newspapers) to subversively depict the mascot of the board game,
Monopoly. Alec Monopoly and his work have been covered by The Huffington
Post, the Wooster Collective, Juxtapoz magazine, Complex magazine, The
Dirt Floor and commissioned by Paramount Pictures and Kiehl’s to name a
few.
Street artist Alec Monopoly
takes his name from the transaction-based board game in which players
buy and sell property, accumulate money, and try to make their opponents
go broke. The artist employs the character of Rich “Uncle” Pennybags,
the game’s suited mascot, to deliver his critique of capitalist greed.
In Alec Monopoly’s tableaux, done on city surfaces or on newsprint and
framed, the mustachioed character sprints with a moneybag under one arm,
laments the lack of universal health care, and gets beaten by a
policeman with a bully club. Alec Monopoly uses a cartoonish style to
comment on real-world problems, delivering a simplified and exaggerated
message nonetheless justified in its decrial of a broken economic
system. The first real figure Alec Monopoly painted was Bernie Madoff,
whom he considers the ultimate symbol of financial collapse. He also
uses cartoon characters Scrooge McDuck and Richie Rich in his work.
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