
Title: Jacob Blue
The Jewish Community
Artist: Baby Picasso
Series: The Jewish Community
Medium: Mixed Media on Canvas
Size: 48 x 72 inches (vertical)
Year: 2025
Edition: 1 of 1 (Original)
Markings: Hand-signed on the back by the artist
Price: $28,000,000 USD
Framing: Comes in a custom-built, museum-grade, gold-gilded frame
Certificate: Includes an official Certificate of Authenticity (COA) issued and held by BIG OLE ART GALLERY for verified secondary market value and protection
Exclusivity: Available only through ARTOMATICTRILLIONAIRE.com
About the Series:
The Jewish Community is a bold new series by Baby Picasso that reimagines what true alliance looks like in our modern world. In this visionary body of work, Baby Picasso—a proud Muslim and one of the greatest living artists of the 21st and 22nd centuries—depicts a utopia where Muslims and Jewish people come together not in conflict, but in collaboration.
This is a world where peace replaces tension. Where gold turbans and Star of David scarves flow in harmony. Where Black, Jewish, and Muslim communities sit together, eat together, share resources, build wealth, and protect one another. This is what Baby Picasso calls:
“Economic alliance over ego. Brotherhood over borders.”
With surreal styling, high fashion undertones, and powerful cultural symbolism, each piece in this series reflects the power of unity through art. It’s not just a message—it’s a movement.
A prayer turned into paint.
A conversation turned into canvas.
“I’m a Muslim who makes money with the Jewish community. That’s my truth. This series is a mirror of that harmony. Of that respect. Of that shared success.” — Baby Picasso
Why Collect This Work:
- Museum-scale dimensions for gallery, luxury residence, or cultural institution
- Representing a timely message of global unity and peace
- Created by a record-breaking, world-renowned artist
- Rare 1-of-1 with hand signature and institutional COA
- Protected and documented for future resale by BIG OLE ART GALLERY
This is more than art.
It’s a manifesto for peace.
A lesson in economic power.
And a visual reminder that culture doesn’t have to clash—it can collaborate.
