Andrew Popydoranova tells us all about collecting encyclopedias as a kid and why countries like Portugal and Iceland are the most impressive landscapes.
Artist Kristin Texeira paints to preserve fleeting moments, and it’s with great intuition and care that she handles not only her own rememberings, but those of others as well.
We talk with Andrew Faris about artistic reinvention and what it's like living and creating in Wyoming after having done so for so many years in both Los Angeles and New York.
It's the last weekend! If you haven't checked out "Just Tell Me You're A Dream Chaser" at Slow Culture Gallery in Chinatown yet then I don't know where you've been.
Some of the first places that Chloe Kovska discovered the aesthetics she liked most, was in comic books, fantasy art, and sneakily watching erotic and vintage cartoons.
We spent the day in Jen's studio talking about psychedelia, plants, and her collaboration with Miley Cyrus for the MTV Video Music Awards in this Amadeus short directed by Matthew Kaundart.
For upcoming issue 08, we talk with Drew about his most recent series "Flagrance", living and working in Vancouver, and the method to the surreal madness in his paintings.
Sean Morris' titillating illustrations have gone through a lot of different incarnations over the years. We talk with the Melbourne-based artist for his feature in upcoming issue 08.
We spent the day in artist Jen Stark's studio talking about Miley Cyrus, psychedelia, plants and the places that have influenced her, for an upcoming exclusive video interview.
Meet Ellen Marie Bae. The Long Beach-based artist is a self-proclaimed breakfast burrito enthusiast and reluctant cat mom, whose illustrations are both witty and charming, and succinctly tell a story using her simply featured characters.
Winter in America offers a diverse collection of black and white photographs from a carefully curated group of photographers that "invokes the harsh times the bitter months bring to the inner city’s inhabitants and the hope that is replenished with the changing of the seasons."
Artist Noah Lyon constitutes art. With the intuitive wherewithal to pull it off, Lyon frames our collective socio-political dysfunction, highlighting our woes with acute hope and humor evocative of change rather than digital fixes.