quavo

QUAVIOUS AND DANIEL: WHAT THE HELLY?

In the world of art and hip-hop, collaborations and unexpected cultural crossovers are what make the landscape exciting. But when ego, legality, and a bit of high-horse energy get involved, we sometimes miss the bigger picture. That brings us to what I like to call: Quavious and Daniel — What the Helly?

Quavo, in front of Daniel’s work. Daniel don’t get mad because I posted this man lmao.

image via the fashion law

Let’s break it down. On March 31, Daniel Arsham — world-renowned artist known for eroded sculptures of classic cars, Pokémon busts, and architecture-inspired pieces — filed a copyright infringement suit against Quavo. The Migos member allegedly used Arsham’s 1961 Ferrari GT sculpture in a teaser video for his song "Trappa Rappa" without permission. The artist claims the sculpture was used without license or compensation, and while the video was eventually removed from some platforms, it remains active on others.

Now here's where it gets confusing — Arsham isn’t new to hip-hop. In fact, he’s embraced the culture many times. He sculpted Jay-Z's hands throwing up the Roc symbol for the Book of Hov exhibit, created a bust of Gunna for the DS4EVER album, and collaborated with Pharrell and Nas. This ain’t his first dance with the rap world. So the question becomes: why did this particular use by Quavo feel like such a violation to him?

Let’s keep it real: Quavo didn’t claim the sculpture was his. He wasn’t reselling it or repurposing it as merch. He stood in front of it. Rapped near it. Tagged the man. So what are we really mad at here? The fact that Quavo didn’t get a written license? Sure — that’s the technical foul. But the spirit of the interaction felt more like a tribute than theft.

As an artist and lawyer myself, let me tell you how I would've handled it. Quavo tags me? Uses my piece in a video? Boom — I reach out. I ask for credit in the video description, a profile link on socials, maybe even a short caption shoutout. I’d use the moment to drive traffic to my page. Then, I’d pitch a limited collaboration — imagine a Quavo bust in my sculpture style, followed by merch off the bust? That’s culture. That’s how you flip a moment into legacy.

Instead, we get legal filings, court headlines, and division. I know Daniel’s team would argue this is about protecting intellectual property — and legally, they’re within their rights. But this isn’t about legality alone. It’s about energy. It’s about how we treat each other in a creative ecosystem that already struggles with ego, access, and opportunity.

Daniel Arsham’s work, while masterful, also borrows. He’s flipped iconic visuals from pop culture with eroded textures — from Pokémon to vintage cars — and yes, I assume those were all licensed. But it still means he understands inspiration and reinterpretation. So why not extend that grace when someone else does it?

Quavo didn’t try to sell the sculpture. He didn’t repackage it. He rapped beside it. And if anything, it brought more eyeballs to Arsham’s world. We can debate copyright law all day, but what I care about is the spirit of the interaction. And this lawsuit? It feels like a missed opportunity.

What this moment needs is more brotherhood between artists of different mediums. Hip-hop and fine art don’t need to operate in separate universes. They should collide. They should overlap. They should build bridges, not court cases.

I say this not to tear anyone down, but to spark thought. I still support Daniel Arsham as an artist. His work is innovative and globally recognized. But I also support artists like Quavo who are continuously pushing visuals and sound into new territories. Let’s be more collaborative. Let’s be more generous. Let’s build.

This article is not legal advice. It is not an attack on Daniel Arsham. It’s just one artist’s opinion, reflecting on how this situation could’ve gone another, better way.

Let’s do better.

Follow me on twitter.com/onlyonejaevonn and visit gettothecorner.com for more thoughts, art, and culture.

Legal Disclaimer: This article is not legal advice. It is a personal commentary and is not intended to defame or harm the reputation of Daniel Arsham or any parties involved. All individuals mentioned should be supported in their creative endeavors.

OUR LEGENDS AIN'T WORRIED

OUR LEGENDS AIN’T WORRIED

October 25, 2021

There is a saying that goes, “Youth is wasted on the young”. Luckily, for the legends that I’m discussing today, youth is a state of mind and nothing can shake a veteran that’s about putting in that work.

I. MELO SCORING OVER 20

This shouldn’t even be a big deal but here’s why it is. So many people counted out that boy Melo for no reason. Some tried to say it was his “attitude”, others said he was confused about his role, and others just flat out thought father time had finally caught up to the B-More legend. Well survey says that’s cap!

That boy Melo is proving his longevity just like his banana boat buddy King James. Even other stars across the league had to express their disbelief about the criticisms regarding Mr. Anthony. Melo has been proving himself to be a valuable asset to the Lakers franchise. Something he wasn’t able to fully show with Houston or OKC. He’s been on a steady trend upwards since his redemption via Portland and now even in Year 19 the sky’s the limit for the legend named Carmelo Anthony!

II. JADAKISS WINNING VERZUZ

Verzuz is a revolutionary platform started by legendary producers Swizz Beatz and Timbaland, that pits togethers the powerhouses of music in a battle of catalogs! This platform is important to the culture because it makes our legends relevant again by putting money in their pockets and exposing to new opportunities with the recent exposure provided by the battle. However, there is an undisputed Verzuz champion and it’s the guy from Yonkers that had a baldie at 19 for no reason and wears timbs w/ shorts. That’s right ladies and gentlemen, D-Block’s finest, Jadakiss!

Kiss proved that lyrical manslaughter is always respected no matter what. After besting Fab during his first Verzuz appearance, Kiss made another entrance into the Verzuz battlefield alongside his L-O-X brothers to battle the Culture Gods, the mighty Dipset, most known by its 3headed monster—Killa Cam, Capo, and the poster child for Bandanas, Juelz Santana!

People were instantly writing off Kiss and the LOX because the cultural dominance of Cam and the Diplomats resonated with the youth so hard, people didn’t see the LOX overcoming those anthems. But that night the Diplomats was looking like they lost all their immunity and was facing 25 to life. Kiss went so crazy he had the Dips in shambles off Clue tape freestyles! Jadakiss may not have had that youthful dominance that Dipset had but he learned kids across the world real good that night. Even kids was just dressing up as Jadakiss for hallowen this year! (probably at the direction of the parents but the point still stands). Jada stuck to his guns and when people tried to write him and them Yonkers boys off, he showed up like Melo breaking another scoring record! Truly remarkable!

MIGHTY MIGHTY D-BLOCK!

III. NASIR’S KINGLY RESURGENCE

Man out of the legends discussed during this article, I gotta be proud most of my guy Nasir! The Queensbridge hero truly showed up these couple years. After a critically slammed fully Kanye produced album, people once again questioned “Is it Over for Nas?” “Should I listen to Illmatic for the 9Billionth time?!”. I personally enjoyed the Kanye produced album NASIR, but whether I enjoyed that or not, Nas shut all critics mouths for good when he linked up with the underdog HIt-Boy. Hit-Boy and Nas seem like a random hookup but Hit-Boy been unconsciously prepped for this moment for a while.

Hit-Boy got to produce maybe the biggest stadium banger of all time, “N***** In Paris”. Besides all the Ye stuff he had the Drake banger “Trophies” under his belt. He maintained consistency blessing the streets with his collab Dom Kennedy tapes and scooped a grammy for producing the late great Nipsey Hussle’s “Racks in the Middle” single. Wait a minute and the boy got production credits on SICKO MODE!

All his previous successes showed that he was ready to give Nas the soundtrack to properly convey his thoughts without forcing him to stay in what Hit-Boy dropped. Those tracks I mentioned sound nothing like each other but they still banged in their own way. Which is what exactly what Nas needed. He’d never fail with lyrical content but Hit-Boy had the ability to keep Nas current.

With the first King’s Disease, Nas showed us he still had plenty to say and he could give us bangers while he said them too! Nas even got his first grammy off this album, he didn’t even get a grammy for what people considered the greatest hip hop album of all time, Illmatic. As if that wasn’t impressive enough, Nas delivers a sequel that is undoubtedly better than the first! His lyrics on point, the beat banging, and his songs has a new breath of life that doesn’t get tiresome.

Nas showed that he doesn’t have to play to the tune of today’s sound but he also showed he doesn’t have to boom bap us to death to stay true to himself. Even with songs like YKTV or SPICY, Nas don’t start rapping like Quavo or NBA Youngboy he stays himself while trusting Hit-Boy’s. production. This idea is expressed with the lyric, “imagine lil uzi on a primo beat, imagine n-a-s on a migos beat.” Which shows Nas isn’t afraid to experiment and he doesn’t have to lose himself while doing so, peace god!

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