This Ana Inciardi mini print puts a playful art history joke on wheels. A pink delivery truck with wooden flatbed sides carries a green bronze-style sculpture of a goat-like figure standing upright, one arm raised, rendered in the style of a classical statue. The driver, a cartoon pig with blond hair and a wide grin, peers out the cab window. The door of the truck reads "Michael Angelo Sculptor" in bold lettering, the punchline landing quietly mid-composition. The palette is warm and cheerful: dusty pink for the cab, orange-red for the flatbed, green for both the sculpture and the driver. Michelangelo was one of the most celebrated sculptors of the Italian Renaissance, famous for works including David and the Pieta. The joke here collapses that legacy into a cheerful neighborhood delivery scenario, the kind of gentle wordplay Richard Scarry built entire worlds around, which the copyright line at the bottom confirms as the source material. Collectors drawn to Inciardi's humor-forward work find this print especially satisfying because the joke operates on two levels at once, art history and illustrated absurdity, without either overwhelming the other. It fits naturally alongside her other character-driven prints that lean into wit and visual storytelling rather than pure subject documentation. This print pairs naturally with others in her broader print series that pull from illustrated children's book aesthetics and pop culture references. For collectors who enjoy thematic groupings, it sits comfortably beside any print where she builds a narrative into a compact, single-image format.
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