There’s a pretty wild story unfolding about one of the world’s most-followed artists, the New York Knicks, and an up-and-coming painter. At the center of this controversy are two Knicks paintings that are far too similar to ignore, so I’m going to do my best to document what we know so far.
The Knicks Commission
Gavin Snider had only been a full-time artist for about 10 months when the New York Knicks hired him to create a painting ahead of the 2026 NBA Finals. After a tight turnaround, Gavin delivered and his painting was shared on the Knicks’ social media pages. Shortly afterwards, Devon Rodriguez shared an oil painting that depicted a nearly identical composition with many of the same characters and details in it… right down to the jersey numbers in the foreground.
According to Gavin, the overlap went far beyond the general idea of painting Knicks fans in New York, stating that his painting used 67 different reference photos, including screenshots from Instagram Reels and Google Street View.
More Similarities Surface
After the controversy began, Gavin noticed that another one of Rodriguez’s recent works appeared computationally similar to one of his paintings from 2025.
Questions About Process
Devon Rodriguez is one of the world’s most-followed visual artists, second only to Banksy, with roughly 44 million followers across Instagram and TikTok. He’s demonstrated serious artistic skill for years through videos documenting his process.
Based on the timeline of the posts, it appears that Devon’s paintings were shared after Gavin’s. Which raises the question of why Devon’s two most recent paintings so closely resemble Devon’s work.
An image from Threads accusing Devon of using generative AI
Some commenters have speculated that AI tools may have been involved, while others believe the similarities could be explained through heavy referencing, tracing, or other traditional techniques.
I can’t definitively say whose work came first or what process was used to create either piece. What strikes me is that both artists are unquestionably skilled painters. If one image was derived from the other, I wonder whether someone used AI tools to introduce small changes to the original composition before tracing and repainting it in their own style.
That’s only speculation on my part, but I don’t believe either of the images we see here are purely the result of generative AI output.
Statements and Responses
Gavin has since released a public statement addressing the situation here https://www.instagram.com/p/DZptTFdjZyC/
After the controversy began circulating online, Devon Rordriguez posted a behind-the-scenes video showing the creation of his painting on Instagram, but didn’t address the allegations directly.
Devon deleted that behind-the-scenes video shortly after posting it, but I’ve shared a copy on the Wayback Machine for reference.
I don’t know if we’ll ever get any definitive answer as to what happened here, but it looks to me like one of these artists copied the other.
What makes this story interesting is the popularity of the artists involved and the allegations of how generative AI may have been used, even if the final results were both hand painted.
update 1 (June 16th, 2026 9pm):
Since this article was originally published, Devon Rodriguez has removed both Knicks-related paintings from his social media accounts and has taken the corresponding prints out of his online shop. I’ve included archived screenshots below showing the posts before they were removed.
ten of these posts have been removed from Instagram
removed from shop
deleted IG post
removed from shop
Of course, removing the posts does not confirm or disprove the plagiarism allegations. There are many reasons an artist might choose to remove artwork from public view.
Gavin Snider’s Knicks paintings remain online, and neither artist has issued any additional public statements since Gavin’s original response.
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