Languor uncovers Black tranquility in Central Park, and recalls the forgotten history of Seneca Village—once home to the largest community of Black property owners in pre-Civil War New York.
Tim Nicholson's route to becoming a sculpture artist under the pseudonym, Secret of Manna, is inextricably linked to his analogue beginnings as a video game designer.
Black and Japanese-American artist Hana Ward’s work spans traditional painting to intricate ceramics that form unconsciously in dialogue with one another.
Devin Reynolds has a specific point of view in his art practice; his aesthetics lean toward sign painting and graffiti in an original, honest style familiar to those who share a similar upbringing.
Jaime Muñoz draws from a range of shared experiences with his community and from his upbringing to explore ideas surrounding colonial history and the notion of modernity, and the mechanization of human labor as it relates to the working class experience and self.
As you walk up the industrial warehouse steps of Andrea Emmerich's studio and down the winding halls of what was once a doll factory, her unit presents almost an idyllic soviet-era apartment of yesteryear with giant factory windows and the weight of age to match.
Amidst a global pandemic, social protests, and the politicization of just about everything that plagued 2020, and continues to seep into 20... Read More...
When artist Katie Benn sits down in front of a new canvas there's never a plan in place. She rarely knows where her paintbrush or pencil wi... Read More...
Berumen's images hold an authentic power that actively draws you into her images and comes from her ability to highlight the familiar faces of her community with love, respect, and appreciation.
Whether for a unique piece, or a limited run of t-shirts, Theresa Escobedo continues to sharpen a visual identity that evolves and expands from one medium to another.
Although traditional in subject matter and practice, Pedro Pedro's paintings stand on their own stylistically, employing funky shapes and colors to reinvent the mundane.
There’s an involuntary elegance about artist Jemima Kirke—in her speech, in her movements—that breathes midmorning Sunday: unhurried and fluid and assured and stoic.
This feature on Grant was originally published in issue 19. Available for purchase here.
I met artist Grant Levy-Lucero in 2016 when he was knitting for fashion... Read More...
Kentaro Okawara never stops creating. In fact, in one month under quarantine, he made fifty paintings — each one exudes the brightly-colored and charmingl... Read More...
There aren't many instances where you encounter a Matisse painting, a Windows internet browser, Leonardo from the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, a poodle, and a... Read More...
Every so often I meet someone, who after talking and spending some time with them, I think to myself, damn I wish I was that positive and zen. I’m not by any m... Read More...
From a small farming town to the ever-creative Bay Area, Roy G Biv has worked to churn out killer psychedelic illustrations that inhabit the music world that inspires him.
Issue 18 artist, Jan Gatewood, speaks with Los Angeles-based artist Adam Alessi about the current state of Adam’s practice as he works toward an upcoming solo exhibition.