Blah Blah Blah by Ruby Mazur - Retroactv Merch Inc.

Blah Blah Blah by Ruby Mazur

Regular price$980.00
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  • Ships within 4-6 weeks

Blah Blah Blah is Ruby Mazur’s pop art punchline. Front and center, his signature Mouth & Tongue design, which was originally used on the “Tumbling Dice” record sleeve, commands the canvas, mid-sentence in a speech bubble that reads “Blah Blah Blah.” Behind it, a riot of luxury logos—Ferrari, Gucci, Rolls-Royce, Fendi, Chanel, Lamborghini—sprawl across the background like status symbols caught in a whirlwind. The brands drip, clash, and layer over one another, turning the whole scene into a colorful commentary on fame, fashion, and the noise of modern culture.

Mazur uses bold brushwork and a bright, graffiti-inspired palette to give the piece its playful edge. Printed as a museum quality paper Signed Litho, the details of each layered stroke come through with striking clarity. Every print is hand-signed by the artist, offering collectors a piece that’s both pop culture-savvy and visually unforgettable.

  • Artist: Ruby Mazur

  • Medium: Archival Matte Fine Art Paper

  • Signature: Hand-Signed by Ruby Mazur

  • Style: Pop Art / Visual Commentary

Make noise on your walls with a piece that celebrates color, commentary, and bold individuality.

Ruby Mazur — The Man Behind the Art

In this exclusive conversation, Ruby Mazur reflects on his five decades of shaping the sound of rock through visual storytelling. He talks about how he found his voice as an artist, what it meant to design for legends like The Rolling Stones, Elton John, and Van Morrison, and why every cover he created had to capture the soul of the music. For Ruby, the work was never just design — it was translation. A way to make you feel the record before you heard a single note.

Our Charity Partner

Every Retroactv purchase helps fund music education through our official charity partner, TeachRock — a nonprofit bringing music, history, and creativity into classrooms across the country. Because music shouldn’t end with the last note — it should live on in the next generation.