Cubist Demons & Heavy Metal Art: Translating Chaos into Structured Geometry

A side-by-side comparison of PH Daniel Sanchez viewing a Basquiat painting in a gallery and his own large-scale cubist demon artwork in an industrial studio.

I’ve been painting in my cubist style for the past five years.

It’s a style that still fascinates me.

Most of it is improvisation. Some pieces are very simple. Some are layered with chaos. All of them help me get out of my head.

When I paint these demons, I’m translating something internal into structure. Fear. Ego. Pressure. Ambition. Instead of letting those things live inside me, I break them apart into geometry.

Artist PH Daniel Sanchez sketching a large-scale cubist mural. Bottom: A curated home gallery wall featuring framed abstract prints, indoor plants, and a central angelic fire painting.

Over time, these works became more than experiments. They became part of my space.

I built my own home gallery, something I dreamed about when I first decided to take art seriously. Now my walls hold my work alongside pieces from artists I deeply admire. It’s part of my identity.

PH Daniel Sanchez curated home gallery wall featuring a large central framed photograph of a man with large wings and fire. Surrounding it are smaller framed art prints of red cubist devil-like figures and a black and white photo, along with potted plants and small sculptures on wall shelves.

What you see here are some of my favorite works from that journey.

Chaos, Cubism, and Basquiat

Living in New York has shaped me.

I’ve had the chance to stand in front of Jean-Michel Basquiat’s work more than once. In New York. In Los Angeles. Every time I see it in person, I’m reminded that chaos can be disciplined.

Artist PH Daniel Sanchez standing in a los angeles The Grand Museum observing original Jean-Michel Basquiat paintings for cubist inspiration.

Basquiat’s energy is raw, but it’s intentional.

That tension inspires me.

You’ll see it in some of my cubist demons. The fractured faces. The layered marks. The crown symbol that appears from time to time. For Basquiat, the crown had its own meaning. For me, it’s a sign of respect. A quiet acknowledgment. If you know, you know.

Large-scale 'Metal' cubist demon painting with a Basquiat-style crown hanging in a dark, modern luxury living room with a black leather sofa and electric guitar.

There’s something powerful about referencing the artists who shaped you without copying them. It becomes a conversation across time.

Music on the Wall

The other day it hit me that some of my red cubist demons would sit perfectly next to Songs for the Deaf by Queens of the Stone Age.

Modern home gallery featuring two red cubist demon art prints flanking a Queens of the Stone Age 'Songs for the Deaf' vinyl record on a brick wall.

That album has been with me for years. I still play riffs from it on my guitar.

When I placed my work next to that vinyl, it felt natural. The geometry, the tension, the desert heat of that record. It made sense visually and emotionally.

Rock and Metal have always felt structured to me. That’s how I try to approach these paintings.

Collage showing cubist art integrated into music spaces, including a red abstract portrait next to an artist with an electric guitar and various studio gallery displays.

They’re not random explosions. They’re controlled distortion.

When someone places one of these pieces in a studio or office, I don’t want it to feel themed. I want it to feel like it belongs there.

Large-scale cubist demon painting with a Basquiat-inspired crown, featuring bold red, yellow, and black abstract strokes, displayed on a concrete wall in a modern industrial loft.

Black and White: Limitation as Discipline

From time to time, I limit myself to one color.

Black and white only.

I’ve learned that strong art often happens inside limitations. When you remove options, you see more clearly.

These black and white cubist demons strip everything down to simple elements.

Minimalist black and white cubist demon prints on a brick wall above a grey sofa.

Some of them carry symbols from heavy metal culture. The horns. The hand signs. The evil eye. The crown. These aren’t gimmicks. They’re part of the language I grew up around.

You’ll also see cigars in some pieces.

If you follow me on social media, you know I smoke cigars occasionally. In my professional life, we host events. We talk about business, mindset, growth. Sometimes those conversations end in a social setting, sharing a cigar.

Minimalist black and white cubist demon prints on a brick wall above a grey sofa.

It’s not a habit I glorify. It’s a symbol of conversation, reflection, and earned pauses. When it appears in my work, it’s part of my reality.

Ultra Minimalism

There are days when I wake up early and paint before I go to work.

On those mornings, I often create the most minimal pieces. One gesture. One line. Very little noise.

Minimalism forces honesty.

It also pairs well with chaos.

I like seeing my ultra minimalist black and white demons next to more complex works. The contrast creates tension. Clean space next to layered intensity.

ultra-minimalist cubist geometric face art in black frame.

That balance reflects how I live.

I’m drawn to chaos, but I respect structure. I value discipline. I value clean spaces. When you hang these minimal pieces on a wall, they stand out because they don’t compete.

They hold their ground quietly.

ultra-minimalist cubist geometric bull art in black frame.

Improvisation and Accidents

Most of my work begins without a strict plan.

I let the lines move. I let shapes collide.

Some days nothing happens. Other days, something unexpected appears. An accident becomes the anchor of the entire piece.

Those are the works I share.

Art gallery visitors viewing a colorful geometric cubist demon painting.

I’ve painted many versions over the years. The ones you see here are the ones that survived. The ones that felt honest. The ones that held tension without falling apart.

Improvisation keeps me present.

Cubism gives me the framework so the chaos doesn’t take over.

A massive black and white abstract cubist canvas painting in a high-ceiling industrial loft apartment.

Final Thoughts

These paintings are not about demons in a literal sense.

They’re about translating internal noise into something structured.

They’re about music, discipline, influence, and identity.

If you’re building your own space, whether it’s a studio, an office, or a home gallery, choose art that reflects who you are. Not what’s trending.

Build walls that tell your story.

That’s what I’ve tried to do with mine.

And I’m still building.

A 3x3 grid of nine framed red cubist demon art prints displayed on a textured red brick wall above a modern grey sofa.