Stripes and spots are the bird
Two markings define a Budgie: the striated head pattern (fine black bars over yellow that fade as the bird matures) and the row of dark throat spots above the chest. We read both from your photo and holds them at the right scale. Juvenile bar pattern looks different from adult — neither is normalized to the other.
Color mutations carry the painting
Budgies come in wild-type green, sky blue, cobalt, mauve, violet, yellow lutino, white albino, and pied combinations of each. We distinguish which mutation your bird is and renders accordingly — a violet Budgie against Pop Art reads as electric color blocks, a wild-type green against Garden palettes recedes into foliage with the throat spots holding the eye.
Pop Art was made for this bird
Budgies suit Pop Art more than any other companion bird — the saturated plumage, the graphic head stripes, the small compact silhouette all reduce cleanly to flat color blocks without losing identity. Watercolor flatters the softer mutations. Art Nouveau suits a pair. As small birds they read best at wall-ornament scale rather than anchor-piece formats.