NeoFunk
Where Glitchwave struts, Graphic Funk dances.
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Graphic Funk is where glitchwave goes to party—an unfiltered blast of 1970s pulp, screenprint texture, and analog futurism.
Born by accident through prompt mutation, this style snapped into place with cityscapes that stacked like stage sets, color schemes straight out of funk-era album covers, and figures that radiated presence. It draws from a visual lineage that celebrated extremes—square-shouldered men with sharp collars and sharper jawlines, women in power silhouettes and sky-high heels, every curve and edge pushed to the limits of iconography.
The palette punches hard: mustard, magenta, cyan, black, orange. Halftones and print textures give the sense it’s been inked and re-inked—loud, lived-in, and always moving. And the settings? Urban and brash. Cities rendered as cubist hieroglyphs, wrapped in rhythm. Not utopia. Not dystopia. Just louder.
Afrocentric style and fashion thread subtly through the work—visible in posture, color, silhouette—anchoring it in a cultural memory that feels both vintage and ahead of its time.
It didn’t start as a plan.
But it’s got a beat now—and we’re not stopping.












