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Jack White | July 11, 2026 | Brooklyn, NY | Concert Poster
Jack White | July 11, 2026 | Brooklyn, NY | Concert Poster
Regular price
$30.00 USD
Regular price
Sale price
$30.00 USD
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Capture the raw, electric energy of Jack White's legendary performance at the Brooklyn Paramount with this stunning, fan-made art print. This piece is a tribute to the unforgettable night of July 11, 2026, in Brooklyn, NY, meticulously designed for the dedicated fan.
The artwork presents a powerful and symbolic vision, merging the historic architecture of the Brooklyn Paramount with the raw iconography of rock and roll. A fractured skull reveals the theater's grand proscenium arch, creating a stage within the mind. Inside, electric violet energy crackles, illuminating a coiled serpent, a crawling centipede, and a setlist that transforms into a pulsing EKG waveform. The design is rendered in a high-contrast, graphic style reminiscent of bold linocut prints, using a striking palette of deep navy, bone white, and intense violet to evoke the industrial grit and nocturnal voltage of Brooklyn.
This poster is printed on high-quality, heavyweight archival paper with a matte finish, ensuring rich colors and sharp details that will last for years. It's the perfect statement piece for your music room, office, or living space, and a unique gift for any Jack White enthusiast.
Available in multiple sizes to fit standard frames. Please note, frame is not included.
**Disclaimer:** This is an unofficial piece of fan art created as a tribute. It is not affiliated with, licensed by, or endorsed by Jack White, his management, or the Brooklyn Paramount.
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Note from the Artist:
When I set out to create this piece for Jack White's show at the Brooklyn Paramount, I wanted to capture the feeling of a performance that gets right inside your head. I was inspired by the theater's incredible, almost gothic architecture and the raw, visceral energy of Jack's music. The idea of the venue itself becoming a skull felt right—music as a memento mori, a living, breathing thing housed in a historic shell. The symbols inside—the serpent-like cable, the heartbeat of the setlist—are all about that live-wire connection between the artist, the audience, and the space itself. It’s my attempt to distill the beautiful, brutal, and electric atmosphere of that one night in Brooklyn into a single image.
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