OUTTAKE GALLERY PRESENTS
Private Collectors Meet & Greet with DEVO
An exclusive evening celebrating limited edition fine art prints
Devo, Fine Art and You
DEVO is on tour and in select cities a gallery has been selected to exhibit an exclusive collection of rare and never-before-seen fine art prints. You can see this collection now at the galleries shown below.
If you purchase one of these museum-quality prints, you and a guest will be invited to meet DEVO at the gallery the night before their concert.
Locations
04/30/2025
Philadelphia, PA
04/30/2025
Philadelphia, PA
04/30/2025
Philadelphia, PA
05/02/2025
Washington, DC
05/02/2025
Washington, DC
05/02/2025
Washington, DC
05/05/2025
New York City, NY
05/05/2025
New York City, NY
05/05/2025
New York City, NY
05/08/2025
Boston, MA
05/08/2025
Boston, MA
05/08/2025
Boston, MA
05/16/2025
Los Angeles, CA
05/16/2025
Los Angeles, CA
05/16/2025
Los Angeles, CA
06/27/2025
Detroit, MI
06/27/2025
Detroit, MI
06/27/2025
Detroit, MI
04/30/2025
Toronto, ON
04/30/2025
Toronto, ON
04/30/2025
Toronto, ON
TBD
More dates to follow.
Check back soon for updates.
Can’t Make It to a Gallery?
You can still collect! Explore limited edition DEVO fine art prints online.
Note: Online purchases do not necessarily include access to the collectors-only event. Contact us for further details.

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By NEAL PRESTON
Neal took this print on Sunset Boulevard, in front of Devo World Headquarters. The band is in full effect. Look closely at their fingers, and you have yet again another subversive message from the band. The bold colors of the suits, the sharpness of the building and the crisp blue sky make for a stunning image. Putting all that into one image with the cleverness of the Energy Domes and the fingers make this a stunning portrait. It has been rarely seen outside of Devo's orbit and will be a stunning addition to your wall. $2000. 16x20. Edition of 20.

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By NEAL PRESTON
Neal took this print on Sunset Boulevard, in front of Devo World Headquarters. The band is in full effect. Look closely at their fingers, and you have yet again another subversive message from the band. The bold colors of the suits, the sharpness of the building and the crisp blue sky make for a stunning image. Putting all that into one image with the cleverness of the Energy Domes and the fingers make this a stunning portrait. It has been rarely seen outside of Devo's orbit and will be a stunning addition to your wall. $2000. 16x20. Edition of 20.

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By NEAL PRESTON
Neal took this print on Sunset Boulevard, in front of Devo World Headquarters. The band is in full effect. Look closely at their fingers, and you have yet again another subversive message from the band. The bold colors of the suits, the sharpness of the building and the crisp blue sky make for a stunning image. Putting all that into one image with the cleverness of the Energy Domes and the fingers make this a stunning portrait. It has been rarely seen outside of Devo's orbit and will be a stunning addition to your wall. $2000. 16x20. Edition of 20.

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By ALLAN TANNENBAUM
Pausing for a moment, Devo relaxes in their comfortable Bermuda shorts to assess the latest in fashion trends. Confident that fresh remains the band’s approach, Devo knows that no hair tonic suggestion from a magazine can match their Groom ‘n Clean policy for proper maintenance of footwear and the scalp. Photographer Allan Tannenbaum helped set the stage with a warm toned backdrop to accentuate the color of their jerseys, featuring lighting that highlights the shiny black hair, belts and shoes of the band. This print will look sharp on your wall. $2400. 17x22. Edition of 50.

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By ALLAN TANNENBAUM
Pausing for a moment, Devo relaxes in their comfortable Bermuda shorts to assess the latest in fashion trends. Confident that fresh remains the band’s approach, Devo knows that no hair tonic suggestion from a magazine can match their Groom ‘n Clean policy for proper maintenance of footwear and the scalp. Photographer Allan Tannenbaum helped set the stage with a warm toned backdrop to accentuate the color of their jerseys, featuring lighting that highlights the shiny black hair, belts and shoes of the band. This print will look sharp on your wall. $2400. 17x22. Edition of 50.

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By ALLAN TANNENBAUM
Pausing for a moment, Devo relaxes in their comfortable Bermuda shorts to assess the latest in fashion trends. Confident that fresh remains the band’s approach, Devo knows that no hair tonic suggestion from a magazine can match their Groom ‘n Clean policy for proper maintenance of footwear and the scalp. Photographer Allan Tannenbaum helped set the stage with a warm toned backdrop to accentuate the color of their jerseys, featuring lighting that highlights the shiny black hair, belts and shoes of the band. This print will look sharp on your wall. $2400. 17x22. Edition of 50.

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By ALLAN TANNENBAUM
Devo entered Allan Tannenbaum’s studio in 1981 and quickly a bond was formed. With their plastic hair on top and equally shiny patent leather shoes on the bottom, the band was ready for action. Sporting pleated slacks and matching khaki shirts, the band looked around the studio and spotted a few items to amplify their duty then, now and for the future of today, when this print would adorn your wall. The sleek Haliburton Zero briefcase provides a bias for action, as does the walkie-talkie, portable cassette player, digital calculator and analogue pocket spy camera. $2400. 17x22. Edition of 50.

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By ALLAN TANNENBAUM
Devo entered Allan Tannenbaum’s studio in 1981 and quickly a bond was formed. With their plastic hair on top and equally shiny patent leather shoes on the bottom, the band was ready for action. Sporting pleated slacks and matching khaki shirts, the band looked around the studio and spotted a few items to amplify their duty then, now and for the future of today, when this print would adorn your wall. The sleek Haliburton Zero briefcase provides a bias for action, as does the walkie-talkie, portable cassette player, digital calculator and analogue pocket spy camera. $2400. 17x22. Edition of 50.

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By ALLAN TANNENBAUM
Devo entered Allan Tannenbaum’s studio in 1981 and quickly a bond was formed. With their plastic hair on top and equally shiny patent leather shoes on the bottom, the band was ready for action. Sporting pleated slacks and matching khaki shirts, the band looked around the studio and spotted a few items to amplify their duty then, now and for the future of today, when this print would adorn your wall. The sleek Haliburton Zero briefcase provides a bias for action, as does the walkie-talkie, portable cassette player, digital calculator and analogue pocket spy camera. $2400. 17x22. Edition of 50.

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By EBET ROBERTS
Early in Devo’s career, Ebet met up with the band to photograph them in the streets of New York. They encountered the busker with the sandwich board on 5th Avenue. She quickly captured the photograph of the band with him and the sign he wore, catching everyone at the right moment. Even the passerby with her ice cream cone could not have made a better cameo appearance. Years later, the band reached out to Ebet to bring this image into this exclusive portfolio. The message of this image remains true then and today. On your wall it will bring a smile each time you gaze at it. $2000. 16x20. Edition of 50.

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By EBET ROBERTS
Early in Devo’s career, Ebet met up with the band to photograph them in the streets of New York. They encountered the busker with the sandwich board on 5th Avenue. She quickly captured the photograph of the band with him and the sign he wore, catching everyone at the right moment. Even the passerby with her ice cream cone could not have made a better cameo appearance. Years later, the band reached out to Ebet to bring this image into this exclusive portfolio. The message of this image remains true then and today. On your wall it will bring a smile each time you gaze at it. $2000. 16x20. Edition of 50.

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By EBET ROBERTS
Early in Devo’s career, Ebet met up with the band to photograph them in the streets of New York. They encountered the busker with the sandwich board on 5th Avenue. She quickly captured the photograph of the band with him and the sign he wore, catching everyone at the right moment. Even the passerby with her ice cream cone could not have made a better cameo appearance. Years later, the band reached out to Ebet to bring this image into this exclusive portfolio. The message of this image remains true then and today. On your wall it will bring a smile each time you gaze at it. $2000. 16x20. Edition of 50.

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By RICHARD ALDEN PETERSON
In 1977 during the band’s formative years, Devo ventured into San Francisco’s creative scene where the band encountered the like-minded team behind the influential Search & Destroy punk ‘zine, the first-wave periodical launched by a City Lights Bookstore employee using funds from Allen Ginsberg and typed on Lawrence Ferlinghetti’s typewriter. Co-publisher and surrealist activist Ricky Trance’s inner-city flat served as a crash pad for Devo and other traveling 1970s punk-era performers. One night, in 1978, while Devo was staying in Ricky’s flat, Sid Vicious arrived wasted at 3:00 in the morning and stepped on Bob 2’s head in total darkness. He reacted instinctively and grabbed Sid’s ankle, twisting it as he screamed in pain. A sprained ankle and an ER visit was the result. During an earlier visit in 1977, S&D “Aerial Photographer” Richard Alden Peterson helped Devo clear their crash pad room of furniture to create spontaneous imaginative photo art, one of their finest collaborations. This fantastic image from early in the band’s evolution is a clear harbinger of Devo’s vision. As the session developed, all involved discerned both the sense of collaboration and the sense of each member aesthetically propping up the others. The skewed angles, the uniforms and the turning away from the camera combine to capture Devo’s imperative and ongoing willingness to defy conventional wisdom. Decades later, this innovative gem will likely be the most invigorating image in your collection. $2000. 17x22. Edition of 23.

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By RICHARD ALDEN PETERSON
In 1977 during the band’s formative years, Devo ventured into San Francisco’s creative scene where the band encountered the like-minded team behind the influential Search & Destroy punk ‘zine, the first-wave periodical launched by a City Lights Bookstore employee using funds from Allen Ginsberg and typed on Lawrence Ferlinghetti’s typewriter. Co-publisher and surrealist activist Ricky Trance’s inner-city flat served as a crash pad for Devo and other traveling 1970s punk-era performers. One night, in 1978, while Devo was staying in Ricky’s flat, Sid Vicious arrived wasted at 3:00 in the morning and stepped on Bob 2’s head in total darkness. He reacted instinctively and grabbed Sid’s ankle, twisting it as he screamed in pain. A sprained ankle and an ER visit was the result. During an earlier visit in 1977, S&D “Aerial Photographer” Richard Alden Peterson helped Devo clear their crash pad room of furniture to create spontaneous imaginative photo art, one of their finest collaborations. This fantastic image from early in the band’s evolution is a clear harbinger of Devo’s vision. As the session developed, all involved discerned both the sense of collaboration and the sense of each member aesthetically propping up the others. The skewed angles, the uniforms and the turning away from the camera combine to capture Devo’s imperative and ongoing willingness to defy conventional wisdom. Decades later, this innovative gem will likely be the most invigorating image in your collection. $2000. 17x22. Edition of 23.

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By RICHARD ALDEN PETERSON
In 1977 during the band’s formative years, Devo ventured into San Francisco’s creative scene where the band encountered the like-minded team behind the influential Search & Destroy punk ‘zine, the first-wave periodical launched by a City Lights Bookstore employee using funds from Allen Ginsberg and typed on Lawrence Ferlinghetti’s typewriter. Co-publisher and surrealist activist Ricky Trance’s inner-city flat served as a crash pad for Devo and other traveling 1970s punk-era performers. One night, in 1978, while Devo was staying in Ricky’s flat, Sid Vicious arrived wasted at 3:00 in the morning and stepped on Bob 2’s head in total darkness. He reacted instinctively and grabbed Sid’s ankle, twisting it as he screamed in pain. A sprained ankle and an ER visit was the result. During an earlier visit in 1977, S&D “Aerial Photographer” Richard Alden Peterson helped Devo clear their crash pad room of furniture to create spontaneous imaginative photo art, one of their finest collaborations. This fantastic image from early in the band’s evolution is a clear harbinger of Devo’s vision. As the session developed, all involved discerned both the sense of collaboration and the sense of each member aesthetically propping up the others. The skewed angles, the uniforms and the turning away from the camera combine to capture Devo’s imperative and ongoing willingness to defy conventional wisdom. Decades later, this innovative gem will likely be the most invigorating image in your collection. $2000. 17x22. Edition of 23.