
City guide
Berlin Street Art Artists Through Street Collector
Collect Berlin through Dima Korma and NASCA Uno roster pages—not mural tourism—paired with interchangeable limited editions.
This is a collector-facing cut through Berlin, not another “Top 10 murals” checklist. Street Collector binds you to practitioners whose prints ship with finite editions, Certificates of Authenticity when applicable, and the same narratives you browse on curated artist hubs.
Key takeaways: Anchor on Dima Korma when you crave scraped-paint collage energy. Pivot to NASCA Uno for contemporary street figuration detached from souvenir photography. Logistics stay inside current artworks so scarcity claims map to Shopify truth.
Berlin’s myth still sells wall tours; your collection should trade in studio facts: what each artist repeats in texture, typography, fragmentation, dusk palette. That specificity is why we stay inside verified roster bios instead of speculating about every wheatpaste alley.
Dima Korma: abrasion as collage
Korma layers torn posters, ghost type, scraped enamel—signals that mimic Kreuzberg facades yet remain legible inside a tabletop lamp. Prints feel like souvenirs of walls you ethically cannot remove. Start on his spotlight editorial if you want the long-form rationale before clicking buy.
NASCA Uno: disciplined street mythology
Where Korma leans gritty, NASCA sharpens symbolism and pacing for collectors migrating from graf books to editions. Useful if you oscillate between graphic novels and tactile painting.
Browse responsibly
Open the global directory when weighing Berlin adjacent EU releases, compare shipping realities, framing costs, taxation. Tie mood boards to factual inventory so wishlists survive accounting.
FAQ
Can I buy Berlin street art prints on Street Collector?
Yes—browse roster artists tied to Berlin (for example through the profiles linked above) and buy where editions are listed. Availability depends on current runs.
Is this a mural map?
No. It is a roster-first guide focused on collectible prints with artist attribution and documented editions.
Where should I start?
Pick whether Korma's layered abstraction or NASCA Uno's contemporary figuration mirrors your collecting goals, then follow through to edition details on each artist page.