Step into Valeriy Zarytovskiy’s "Garage" series, where cars aren't just machines but pure attitude rendered with playful swagger.
Forget subtle blends; this is a world of loud, flat colour blocks – electric pinks, vibrant teals, and bold blues slamming against crisp, heavy linework that practically vibrates off the canvas.
Each ride feels yanked straight from a half-remembered dream: slightly exaggerated, buffed with nostalgia, yet instantly, undeniably familiar.
The style screams cel-shaded cool, echoing the graffiti-fueled energy of cult classics like Jet Set Radio, mixed with a shot of early 90s cartoon DNA.






Source: Valeriy Zarytovskiy
Shapes get squashed and stretched, giving these vehicles a chunky, personality-packed presence. Perfect proportions? Nah. Zarytovskiy deliberately throws them off, injecting life and dodging the trap of sterile, over-polished perfection.
You'll find showroom-ready cruisers gleaming, right alongside battle-scarred beasts spitting smoke and missing panels.
But pristine or punished, every single one feels kinetic. Even the stationary ones seem caught mid-gearshift, teetering on the brink of motion, a tire squeal hanging in the air.

Forget technical manuals and hyper-realistic renders. This series vibes closer to pop art's punch and the raw energy of low-fi comics.
It swerves around slick, brochure-ready perfection, flooring it towards pure energy and the hazy glow of memory. It captures the gut-level thrill cars had before they turned into logos or status symbols.
Zarytovskiy doesn't just draw cars. He uncages the wild, stylized versions living inside your head.
To view more of Zarytovskiy's work, visit their Behance.