OSGEMEOS
OsGemeos is the artistic name of the Brazilian twin‐brothers duo Otávio Pandolfo and Gustavo Pandolfo — “the twins” in Portuguese.
Biography
Bio
Otávio and Gustavo Pandolfo were born in 1974 in São Paulo, Brazil. They grew up in the Cambuci district of São Paulo, where they developed early a shared visual language and a strong sibling bond.
Academic Carrer
While there is less detailed documentation about formal academic art degrees, the siblings began their artistic journey in the streets of São Paulo. They initially engaged in break-dancing, hip-hop culture, and graffiti in the 1980s, and by 1987, they began spray‐painting graffiti under the name Os Gemeos. Their graffiti practice evolved with brushes, roller,s and façade paints (owing to limited access to spray cans) and they used the city as their studio.
Professional Carrer
Their work evolved from graffiti to large murals, installations, and international exhibitions. Today they are regarded as leading figures in global urban art, with works displayed in major museums and major public spaces worldwide.
Influences
Their visual language is shaped by early hip-hop culture, Brazilian folk traditions, and their shared imaginary world as twins — expressed through their signature yellow characters and surreal storytelling.
Works from OSGEMEOS
Wholetrain - OSGEMEOS
OSGEMEOS
Edition of /100 + 10 AP
Giclée print on paper
Signed and numbered by the artist
Velvet 270 g/m2 paper
50 × 70 cm
2025
*This edition will be shipped within a period of up to 3 months after the purchase date.
In the early days of graffiti, the ultimate flex in the scene had a name: wholetrain. To paint not just a single carriage but an entire moving vessel from end to end was a feat of scale, coordination, and audacity. Emerging in late-1970s New York, the wholetrain became a rite of passage: it was a moving celebration of collaboration between different artists, friendship, adrenaline, and sheer artistic nerve. When a wholetrain rolled into a station, everyone stopped. It was that powerful.
This spirit of collective creation, risk, and improvisation is the foundation of WHOLETRAINS, a project initiated by Alexandre Farto aka Vhils. He invited close friends, long-time collaborators, and some of the most important graffiti artists today — Barry McGee, OSGEMEOS, and Revok, who in different corners of the world, also grew up working on trains — to take this legendary spirit and twist it into something new. Instead of steel and subway tunnels, the structure unfolds on a long sheet of paper mapping the outline of a real train from Portugal’s Sintra Line.




