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Fela Kuti Saxophone art Digital download PNG Nigerian flag Afrobeat music PNG African jazz funk music Pan African art sticker PNG Instant download printable

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There are few images more iconic in African music history than Fela Kuti with a saxophone in hand. This vibrant digital sticker-style art print captures that exact moment — Fela deep in performance, dressed in traditional Nigerian agbada rendered in electric green, backed by the bold green and white of the Nigerian flag. It is a portrait of pure musical power, cultural pride, and unstoppable creative energy.


✦ ABOUT THIS ARTWORK

• Sticker-style digital illustration with a clean bold white outline cut — graphic, expressive, and ready to display anywhere

• Fela is depicted mid-performance, saxophone raised, in a richly patterned green agbada with white adire detailing — a direct nod to his Yoruba cultural roots

• The Nigerian flag circle backdrop anchors the piece in national identity and African pride

• Psychedelic face painting in red, orange, and teal brings the signature Afrobeat visual energy that defined Fela's stage presence

• Warm earth-tone striped background gives the composition a classic, editorial feel


✦ WHAT YOU GET

• 1 high-resolution PNG file — sharp, print-ready, and optimised for both digital display and physical printing

• Instant download — available immediately after purchase, no waiting, no shipping

• Personal use licence — for wall art, music room décor, phone wallpaper, personal printing, or gifting


✦ PERFECT FOR

• Fela Kuti fans and Afrobeat music lovers worldwide

• Nigerian music and culture enthusiasts

• Jazz, funk, and world music collectors

• Members of the African diaspora celebrating Nigerian heritage

• Musicians, music teachers, and studio owners looking for bold music room art

• Anyone who believes music is the most powerful form of resistance


✦ ABOUT THE LEGEND

Fela Anikulapo Kuti was born in Abeokuta, Nigeria in 1938. He studied music at the Trinity College of Music in London before returning to Africa and forging Afrobeat — a genre that fused Yoruba rhythms, jazz, highlife, and funk into a sound unlike anything the world had heard. His saxophone was his sword. Through albums like Zombie, Expensive Shit, and Water No Get Enemy, he challenged military dictatorship, corruption, and colonialism with every note. Decades after his passing in 1997, his music remains a living revolution.

You will get a PNG (16MB) file

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