Since its humble ancestry, Supreme has collaborated with artists big and pocket-size. The brand's art collaborations spotlight both surreptitious graffiti legends similar JA One and popular contemporary artists including Takashi Murakami. Today, old Supreme skateboard decks made by artists such as Damien Hirst are treated like canvasses and fetch thousands of dollars at art auctions. These collaborations have included everything from elementary reproductions of famous photographs to consummate re-designs of the make's famous box logo, which was of course inspired past the work of Barbara Kruger.

Although every collaboration is different, all of the artists Supreme has worked with over the years have maintained a high level of subcultural coolness that the brand is known for. Anyone who dives into the history of Supreme's art collaborations will come across an art gallery like no other—i filled with the work of revered gimmicky artists, graffiti bombers, '90s skateboard graphic designers, Lower East Side photographers, and more. From the brand'south origins in 1994 to the present mean solar day, this is a history of Supreme'due south artist collaborations.

Rammellzee

Rammellzee Supreme Photo Tee
Image via Supreme

When: 1994-Nowadays
Anyone who visits Supreme's website volition run into a weird looking machine on the homepage's background. That'south one slice from a series of race car sculptures made by the late graffiti artist Rammellzee. He was down with Supreme since the brand start opened its New York City store in 1994–he was even at the Supreme's Los Angeles opening party in 2004. From Far Rockaway, Queens, Rammellzee was well known for his elaborate sculptures, costumes, masks, and an unique style of graffiti which he dubbed "Gothic Futurism." For years, he produced other worldly art at the "Boxing Station," the nickname for his studio in Tribeca, Manhattan. Backpacks and other hand painted items that he fabricated for his showtime Supreme collaboration in 2004 are considered some of the rarest items the make'south e'er released—only a scattering of products were made. For Supreme'southward Spring/Summer 2020 collection, the make revisited its piece of work with Rammellzee by releasing  T-shirts, hoodies, and Gore-Tex anoraks covered with his iconic artwork.

Dondi White

When: 1994-2009
The late Dondi White is known equally 1 of the greatest graffiti writers of all time. With an eye for both lettering and fine fine art, Dondi became ane of the first New York graffiti writers to have his piece of work acknowledged by art galleries in the Lower East Side during the '80s. The artwork used in his Supreme collaboration focused on his abstract characters, equally opposed to his large, masterpiece burners. Dondi'southward artistic virtuoso was well exhibited in this collaboration of T-shirts. His work also appeared in Malcolm McLaren's Supreme collaboration and Dondi even painted a landscape for the Supreme shop when it opened in 1994.

Martha Cooper

When: 2004
The almost iconic images of the birth of hip-hop in New York Urban center have been captured by Martha Cooper's lens. We're talking about B-boys, graffiti writers, and the citizens of the city that inspired Supreme's aesthetic and attitude. Cooper is generally known for Subway Art, a book of graffiti photographs that she made with Henry Chalfant. Today, that book is even so revered every bit a graffiti bible. Her Supreme collaboration in 2004 consisted of raglan long sleeve shirts with large screenprinted images of her pioneering street photography. Cooper is still photographing graffiti today.

Peter Saville

Peter Saville Supreme
Paradigm via Grailed


When: 2005 and 2013
Peter Saville is one of the nigh revered British graphic designers, and so it's not surprising that Supreme would tap into Saville'south work for multiple collaborations. Long before Supreme, Saville collaborated with designers such as Yohji Yamamoto, John Galliano at Dior, and Jun Takahashi of Undercover. Although Saville is mostly known for his AW03 drove with Raf Simons, pieces from his 'Power, Corruption, Lies' drove with Supreme in Spring 2013 have grown to get certified grails. Previously, Supreme collaborated with Savile in 2005 for a minor run of T-shirts, which highlighted Saville'south early on work designing record sleeves for bands like Joy Partitioning and New Order.

Larry Clark

Supreme Larry Clark KIDS Anniversary Collection
Epitome via Supreme

When: 2005, 2015, and 2017
Larry Clark is more often than not known for his cult classic movie Kids, whose cast members were picked from the very litter of skate kids that hung out in front of Supreme'south Lafayette St. store. The controversial flick managing director and photographer has collaborated with Supreme on a number of occasions. He shot an X-rated calendar for Supreme in 2005 and besides made a T-shirt for Supreme which featured a photograph from Clark's 1971 book Tulsa–a collection of gritty photos from his hometown of Tulsa, Oklahoma which foreshadowed the visceral documentation of troubled youth that Kids was later known for. In 2015, Supreme released a collaboration with Larry Clark to celebrate the 20th ceremony of Kids, which featured picture show stills from the flick. In 2017, the brand released some other ane-off shirt with Clark that featured more than of Clark's nude photography. For the make'south 25th anniversary, Clark modeled Supreme's Swarovski box logo T-shirt.

Keo TC5

When: 2005
Keo TC5 is another respected New York City graffiti artist who is by and large known as the artist who made MF Doom'south legendary mask and album covers such as Operation Doomsday. He didn't do any Doom-related piece of work for Supreme, merely he did design the artwork for Supreme'due south Loosies, Rosary, and Jail "Cartoon Hands" pieces. We wouldn't mind seeing a Doom photograph tee, though.

Kenneth Cappello

Mike Tyson Supreme Kenneth Cappello Photo Tee
Prototype via Grailed

When: 2005-Nowadays
In a James Jebbia interview published inside the Supreme Rizzoli book, Jebbia said he was inspired to brand Supreme'southward starting time photograph T-shirts later on seeing similar T-shirts being worn in Harlem and the Bronx. After seeing some photos of Raekwon past the renowned photographer Kenneth Cappelo, Jebbia tapped into Cappelo'southward piece of work and the rest is history. You can thank Cappello for some of Supreme's nearly notable photo series T-shirts. He's the human being responsible for snapping Raekwon, Mike Tyson, and the infamous Dipset T-shirt for Supreme. Just Cappello'south work with Supreme doesn't end at that place, he'southward as well been the lensman backside many of Supreme'south editorials which only popular-up in obscure Japanese magazines. Recently, Cappello shot the cover for Billie Eilish's Grammy award winning album, When Nosotros All Fall Asleep, Where Do Nosotros Go?

Beak Thomas

When: 2005
Don't get it twisted; Supreme is firmly rooted in skateboarding, especially the scene that existed when the brand started in 1994. The brand'south collection with lensman Nib Thomas pays homage to the skate civilisation depicted in movies similar Kids. Similar to other collaborations with photographers, the collection featured T-shirts and tank tops blown up with Thomas' photos of '90s New York City skaters.

Roy Lichtenstein

When: 2006
Comic strips are what inspired pop artist Roy Lichtenstein, and his 2006 collection with Supreme was a tribute to his artistic style. This was as well the era where large and bold prints ruled streetwear. Supreme's longsleeve T-shirts with Lichtenstein were covered top-to-bottom with sobbing women whose sorrow was contrasted with blond hair and red lipstick that popped from the graphics.

Ari Marcopoulos

Supreme Ari Marcopoulos
Image via Grailed

When: '90s and 2006
In 1994, Ari Marcopoulos started hanging around downtown New York Metropolis, and he documented the skaters who were a function of the scene that Supreme sprung from. Some of the first Supreme T-shirts to feature photos predominantly featured Marcopoulos' work, such equally a T-shirt featuring shots of Jean-Michel Basquiat.  In 2006, Supreme centered a collaboration on Marcopoulos that was specifically focused on his photos of New York Metropolis skateboarders in '90s New York .

Charlie Ahearn

Supreme Charlie Ahearn
Image via Grailed

When: 2006
Charlie Ahearn captured an integral part of New York City before information technology became gentrified and filled with out-of-towners. He is well recognized as being the creator of the seminal 1983 hip-hop picture show, Wild Style. His drove for Supreme chronicled the earliest era of hip-hop in NYC, and his gritty tardily-'70s and early-'80s images take things back to before Times Foursquare was cleaned up.

Joe Cool


When: 2007
Guess who's dorsum in the motherfucking firm? Joe Cool, the man backside the artwork on Snoop Dogg'southward Doggystyle album, collaborated with Supreme to bring new life to the tales of the seediest dogs. Even if you don't sip on gin and juice, Cool'southward brick wall have on the Box Logo and the "Dogs Playing Poker" painting is plenty for streetwear die-hards to cave into his designs.

R. Crumb

R. Crumb Supreme
Image via Supreme


When: 2007
Thick women, Mr. Natural, and Fritz the Cat are 3 things that R. Nibble was known for. Simply he was also an important figure in the underground comics scene. His alternative viewpoint was shown in his collaboration with Supreme, which brought a new audience to drawings that highlight paranoia and an overall lack of faith in the human condition.

Marking Gonzales

Mark Gonzales Supreme Crewneck
Prototype via Supreme

When: 2007-electric current
The Gonz has been down with Supreme since dorsum in the mean solar day–he used to write postcards to Harold Hunter at the shop addressed "Supream." He's also designed sculptures and interior art for many of Supreme'due south brick and mortar stores. So naturally, there are many Supreme 10 Gonz collabs. I of the standouts is this "Supream"varsity jacket from Fall/Winter 2017.

JA One

Supreme Ja One Hoodie XTC Graffiti
Image via Grailed


When: 2008
This depression cardinal Supreme collaboration is a favorite for many graffiti enthusiasts. In 2008, Supreme released T-shirts and hoodies with the prolific New York City graffiti bomber JA One. For those who don't know about JA, just footstep outside because he's been consistently tagging the streets of New York for nearly three decades. The Upper West Side graffiti bomber was infamously profiled by Rolling Stone magazine in 1995 and has been deified ever since. JA surprisingly appeared in one of the brand'southward editorials and even conducted one of his just interviews with the brand.

Shawn Mortensen

When: 2008
The late Shawn Morteson was an eclectic photographer from Los Angeles who was as known for photographing magazine covers with Biggie Smalls and documenting the AIDS crisis in S Africa. A year before his unfortunate passing, Supreme collaborated with Morteson for a serial of baseball shirts. The photos featured images Morteson took of the Zapatista uprising in Chiapas, United mexican states, which coincidentally happened in 1994.

Ralph Bakshi

When: 2008
Ralph Bakshi's collaboration with Supreme featured stills from his 1975 film Coonskin, a controversial take on Blaxploitation cinema of the fourth dimension, that swapped out existent people for animals. The imagery from the collaboration is only every bit you'd wait and definitely embodies every meaning of the phrase "Super Fly."

KAWS

Kaws Supreme Box Logo
Image via Grailed

When: 2001, 2008, and 2011
KAWS has been working with Supreme ever since they released a series of three skateboard decks in 2001 featuring the graffiti creative person's take on the Michelin Man. KAWS' defunct clothing brand, OriginalFake, collaborated with Supreme twice. Their showtime collaboration featured a Kate Moss shirt that referenced KAWS' iconic advertising-busting street fine art which conquered bus stations and phone booths throughout New York Urban center the '90s. Some other collab threw it back to KAWS' roots every bit a graffiti author, with a T-shirt featuring KAWS' stylized take on the brand'southward name.

Sean Cliver

When: 2008, 2010
Sean Cliver is a revered skateboard graphic designer whose work was seen on skateboard decks in the '90s by Powell Peralta, World Industries, 101, Birdhouse and many others. Few are able to parcel the fucked up aspects of society into fun-looking cartoons like Cliver can. His T-shirts for Supreme featured artwork of kids with sus scrofa heads and butcher knives, Hitler, the KKK, Blaxploitation characters, and even Jesus, all depicted as innocent children.

Pedro Bell

Pedro Bell Supreme Artist Collaborations
Epitome via Grailed

When: 2009
Pedro Bell is one of the few artists who really redesigned the Supreme logo. Bong, who has worked with George Clinton and Parliament Funkadelic, brought a '70s flare to the brand's logo. The "Blockbuster" graphic brought a touch of electricity and energy, which surely helped funk things upward.

Malcolm McLaren

Malcolm Mclaren
Epitome via Grailed

When: 2009
Although his intentions may be debatable, if it weren't for Malcolm McLaren, punk civilisation would non take thrived equally much as information technology did. He and Vivienne Westwood are largely responsible for giving a definable look and aesthetic to the youth civilization that was buzzing in England during the 1970s. Supreme broke out all stops with this collaboration and released sweatshirts, T-shirts, and Vans with printed insoles.

Damien Hirst

When: 2009
Damien Hirst doesn't demand the cheque that comes with a Supreme collaboration. Even a decade afterwards he dropped this collab, he's still considered to be i of the richest living artists. Sets of skate decks he designed for Supreme resell for as much every bit $10,000. The dorsum of Hirst's famous dotted box logo T-shirt reads "Life's a Bitch, and then y'all dice," which is a reference to the famous Nas lyric and the art featured inside the box logo. The docile colorful dots seen within the logo are supposed to represent pills and were directly pulled from Hirst's "Controlled Substances" and "Pharmaceutical" paintings.

Cost

Cost KRT Supreme Artist Collaborations
Image via Grailed

When: 2010
Did Cost really fuck Madonna? He won't say, but his drove with Supreme fabricated his question-provoking statement fifty-fifty more notorious. Throughout the '90s, Toll and REVS conquered New York Metropolis with wheat paste posters and paint roller tags. They were 2 of the first graffiti artists to pioneer these methods of getting up. The brand's collaboration with COST consisted of four T-shirts, showcasing Price'southward posters and his sick handstyle. Although Price did make a brief improvement in the 2010s he rarely sells his art and remains in the shadows. This makes this Supreme collaboration one of the only times he'southward ever sold his work to the public.

Shaniqwa Jarvis

Shainqwa Jarvis Lee Scratch Perry Supreme Photo Tee
Image via Grailed


When: 2010-2013
Shaniqwa Jarvis is a New York City based photographer who has worked with brands similar Fear of God, Uniqlo, MadeMe, Nike and more. However, she is known among Supreme die hards as the photographer backside the Shane MacGowan, Ghostface Killah, and Lee "Scratch" Perry T-shirts for Supreme.

Futura

Supreme Futura Hoodie
Paradigm via Supreme

When: 2011
Futura was making moves in the New York City streetwear game years before Supreme even opened its doors. If you don't know, practice your inquiry on the pioneering streetwear brands that the deified New York City graffiti writer launched such every bit Not From Concentrate or Projection Dragon. Supreme's article of clothing can fetch high resale prices, and Futura's collaboration with the brand encapsulated this thought perfectly. The clothes read, "Fuck You lot Pay Me." Now, we don't think the graffiti artist was talking about re-sellers, but his hoodies, hats, and beanies fit in perfectly with that sentiment. If you lot ever visit Supreme's new Manhattan shop at 190 Bowery, make sure you get a good look at the mural Futura painted at that place.

David Lynch

Supreme David Lynch
Image via Grailed

When: 2011
In what it lacked in size, David Lynch's piece of work with Supreme fabricated up for with its intent. The collection featured an however image from Lynch's motion-picture show Blueish Velvet as well as an original lithograph drawing from the master of strange, twisted cinema.

Harmony Korine

Harmony Korine Supreme
Image via Grailed

When: 2011
Harmony Korine is well known for movies like Bound Breakers, just some may be surprised to acquire that he started his picture career by writing the screenplay for Kids. Korine designed 1 T-shirt and several decks for Supreme. The shirt featured a photograph of Macaulay Culkin sitting on a couch, artillery folded, next to two ballerinas. All the photos from this collaboration were taken from Korine's 1998 photo book, The Bad Son. The pictures were all taken during the filming of Sonic Youth's music video for "Sun."

Daniel Johnston

Supreme Daniel Johnston Rayon Shirt
Image via Supreme

When: 2012, 2015, and 2020
An influential pioneer in the world of lo-fi stone music, the late Daniel Johnston is some other artist who Supreme has frequently collaborated with. Bated from music, Johnston was also well known for his otherworldly drawings. Supreme began collaborating with the artist in 2012 for sketch-like artwork on three different T-shirts. The T-shirts all have imagery based around superheroes and the internal battles that we all wage. The make collaborated with Johnston once again in 2015 and released a push button-upwardly shirt with his art for Spring 2020.

Jean-Michel Basquiat

Supreme Jean Michel Basquiat
Image via Supreme

When: 2013
Jean-Michel Basquiat'due south proper noun is synonymous with underground art and the fanaticism that the genre creates. For this collaboration with Supreme, the collection is sprawling and goes beyond only T-shirts. Basquiat's artwork was also placed across the chest of push-up shirts and along the back of an M-65 jacket that features Basquiat's drawing of Cassius Clay. If yous were looking for something a petty more reserved, in that location was a photo hoodie, too.

Raymond Pettibon

Supreme Raymond Pettibon
Prototype via Supreme

When: 2014

Fans of the punk rock band Black Flag are already well versed in Raymond Pettibon's work. The California artist is famously known for designing Black Flag's iconic bar logo and many of their anthology covers. Pettibon is also well known for designing the anthology cover for Sonic Youth's Goo. Five years after this Supreme collaboration, Pettibon went on to work on some graphics with Kim Jones for Dior.

Dash Snow

Supreme Dash Snow T-Shirt
Image via Supreme


When: 2016
The late Nuance Snow was a legendary New York Metropolis creative person who became well recognized for his newspaper collages and Poloroid photographs. Alongside artists such as Dan Colen and Ryan McGinley, Snow defined an era within downtown New York's art scene. Outside of having his works exhibited in the Whitney Biennial, Snow was too known as Sace—a prolific graffiti writer who was a member of the IRAK graffiti crew. This T-shirt and skate deck set, which arrived nearly 7 years afterwards Snow's untimely death, focused on Snow's collection of twenty tabloid newspaper cut-outs of Saddam Hussein. This specific work was slightly controversial because each newspaper was decorated with the artist's own semen. This entire collection of newspapers sold for $240,000 in 2014.

Blade

Supreme Artist Collaborations Blade Hoodie
Image via Supreme

When: 2016
Bract was infamously dubbed the "King of Graffiti" by the end of the 1970s for painting nigh 5,000 whole New York City subway cars. The Bronx born subway graffiti writer is still considered to be a graffiti pioneer today. When Supreme hit upward Blade for a collaboration in 2016, they released T-shirts, long sleeves, pins, hoodies, and a campsite cap. The standout piece from this collaboration was a hoodie featuring a reworked graphic of one of Blade's most iconic works of vandalism, a whole auto featuring his proper name on a sky blueish groundwork with "swinging" letters.

Mike Hill

Mike Hill Supreme Artist Collaborations
Image via Supreme

When: 2017
As the cofounder and fine art director of the skateboard brand Alien Workshop, Mike Hill is known for making some of the most iconic and surreal graphics within skateboarding. For his Supreme collaboration, the brand asked Loma to make some of his iconic papier-mâché dioramas. This collaboration tipped its lid to one of the commencement skateboard brands to ever button the boundaries of graphic design.

Wilfred Limonious

Supreme Wilfred Limonious
Prototype via Supreme

When: 2017
Wilfred Limonious is a Jamaician artist who is known every bit the male parent of dancehall art. Throughout the '80s and '90s, Limonious drew album covers and other art for a number of Jamaican tape labels. His Supreme collaboration focused on the artwork he fabricated for labels such as Power House.

Earsnot

Supreme Comme des Garcons Earsnot Schott Leather Jacket
Image via Supreme

When: 2018
Along with Dash Snowfall, Supreme featured another member of the IRAK graffiti crew for a collaboration with Comme des Garcons SHIRT. Kunle Martins, who is better known as the graffiti tagger Earsnot, created the "Justice For All" graffiti printed on diverse pieces in this collection. According to an interview with Complex, the graphics that decorated these pieces were really sourced from a blackbook Earsnot gave to Supreme.

Mike Kelley

Mike Kelley Supreme Hoodie
Image via Supreme

When: 2018
The late Mike Kelley was a revered American artist whose nigh iconic work includes a series of sculptures crafted out of  repurposed thrift store toys, blankets, and worn stuffed animals. One of Kelley's nearly recognizable pieces of work is his art for the cover of Sonic Youth'due south 1992 album, Dingy. That cover art, images of Kelley's iconic blimp animal sculptures. and vandalized textbook doodles from Kelley's Reconstructed History series, were printed on various pieces of apparel for this collaboration.

Andres Serrano

Supreme Andres Serrano
Paradigm via Supreme

When: 2018
Andres Serrano hands goes down every bit one of the nearly controversial artists Supreme has ever collaborated with. The brand'southward collection with Serrano zeroed in on what he's known for, which is artwork made out of his own bodily fluids. When works similar Piss Christ, which featured an epitome of a Jesus Christ figurine submerged in a tank of urine, were first exhibited to the public, they were widely condemned equally obscene and disrespectful. But other groups, like the metal ring Metallica, praised Serrano's artwork and predominantly featured information technology on their anthology covers in the '90s. Serrano's collaboration with Supreme included wearing apparel with Piss Christ and a similar slice that was innocuously titled Madonna & Kid. Supreme also took one piece from Serrano's Semen and Blood serial and turned information technology into printed hoodies, sweatpants, and Vans canvas sneakers.

Lee Quinones

Supreme Lee Lions Den Denim Jacket
Image via Supreme

When: 2018
All hip-hop heads know that Illmatic opens with a sample from the classic 1983 moving picture Wild Style. A clip of that scene, which Nas sampled, is how Supreme properly teased its collaboration with the pioneering New York City graffiti author, Lee Quinones. A Nuyorican raised in the Lower East Side, Lee is well recognized for painting trains and handball courts through the '70s and '80s. He went on to become one of the kickoff graffiti writers to successfully transition into a gallery setting during the early on '80s. His collaboration with Supreme reproduced some of his almost iconic work over the years, such as his Lion's Den handball court landscape.

Nan Goldin

Nan Goldin Supreme
Paradigm via Supreme

When: 2018
Nan Goldin is a famous American photographer who is well known for her 1986 volume The Carol of Sexual Dependency. Goldin's landmark book captured the wrought of heroin addiction in the Lower E Side, the No Wave music and art scene, and most importantly, the burgeoning LGBTQ community in New York Urban center subsequently the Stonewall Riots. Her collaboration with Supreme was centered on portraits she took of New York City drag queens. When Faddy asked for a annotate from Supreme on the collaboration, the brand said "Goldin'south work is existent and raw–in the time, places and subject field matter she shot. It comes from an era where the subjects she documented were taboo by society's standards. To exercise this project with Nan Goldin is to celebrate the diversity her work represents and expose young people to it." Later this flavor, Supreme likewise collaborated with another meaning figure from the East Hamlet'due south drag scene, the artist Tabboo!

Chris Cunningham

Supreme Chris Cunningham
Epitome via Supreme

When: 2018
Supreme's collaboration with Chris Cunningham was fabricated to bless all the hardcore Aphex Twin fans out there. Cunningham is a British artist who is known for directing music videos for a number of electronic musicians. Supreme's collaboration with Cunningham was specifically centered on images from his 2005 brusque film, Safety Johnny.

Martin Wong

Martin Wong Supreme
Image via Supreme

When: 2019
Two decades after Martin Wong's passing, Supreme commemorated the Chinese-American creative person with a capsule collection dedicated to his work. Originally a ceramic artist from San Francisco, when Wong moved to New York Urban center in 1978 he quickly became entrenched in the culture of the East Village. During his time in New York, Wong painted surreal but realistic images of the Lower East Side, which captured the graffiti movement, urban decay, the LGBTQ community, and a sprawling hispanic enclave in the "Loisaida." Today, Wong'southward piece of work could be found in museums like the MoMa and the Metropolitan Museum of Art. Supreme highlighted several paintings by Wong and reproduced information technology on skateboard decks, hoodies, T-shirts, rayon shirts, beanies, and leather Schott jackets.

David "Shadi" Perez

David Shadi Perez Classic Ad Hoodie Supreme
Image via Supreme

When: 2019
For its Leap 2019 season, Supreme released a hoodie featuring one of the brand's very offset ads. This ad, forth with many others, was shot by David "Shadi" Perez, who is as well the human being behind a number of iconic '90s rap music videos such as "Hot Sex" by A Tribe Chosen Quest and "Gratitude" by The Beastie Boys. Perez photographed the picture on this hoodie in the basement of Supreme'southward Lafayette Street store. It features skaters Justin Pierce, Gio Estevez, Ryan Hickey, Mike Hernandez, and Jones Keefe.

Delta

Supreme Delta Varsity Jacket
Image via Supreme

When: 2019
For its Fall 2019 collection, Supreme finally best-selling European graffiti civilisation when it collaborated with the Dutch graffiti creative person Delta. Known every bit Boris Tellegen today, Delta is not just i of the most popular European graffiti writers of all time, he's also credited with pioneering an unique three-dimensional mode of lettering. To learn more nearly the Amsterdam graffiti legend, please peep our interview with Delta on his Supreme collaboration.

SaneSmith

Supreme Sanesmith Graffiti Tee Bridge
Epitome via Supreme

When: 2019
When Supreme dropped a range of graphic T-shirts for Wintertime 2019, it included another must accept precious stone for graffiti nerds. "The Span" T-shirt was Supreme's official collaboration with the infamous New York City graffiti duo, SaneSmith. Their collaboration with Supreme was centered on i of the biggest events in the history of New York Urban center graffiti: Communicable a giant tag on the Brooklyn Bridge. To learn more about how Smith pulled off this decease-defying stunt with his brother, read our interview about SaneSmith's collaboration with Supreme here.

Takashi Murakami

Supreme Murakami T-Shirt
Image via Supreme

When: 2007 and 2020
A revered Japanese contemporary artist who requires little to no introduction, Takashi Murakami remains one of the most influential Japanese artists living today. At the turn of the millennium, he founded the "superflat" movement, a post-modern manner of art that was inspired by both Japanese manga and traditional Japanese screen printing. Today, Murakami is known for his collaborations with Kanye Westward, Louis Vuitton, ComplexCon, and now Supreme for its recently released box logo T-shirt for COVID-19 relief. Even so, Murakami collaborated with Supreme long before that for a set of skateboard decks in 2007.