From the sass of a wilting rose, to the ironic humor in her redesign of our childhood cereal boxes, Miceli has struck a chord with the children of the internet.
Playful toe and finger lengths, soft brush strokes that bend elbows or enlarge buttcheeks, and seas of hairy tree trunk thighs, accentuate Jeffrey Cheung's work.
Brooklyn-based artist Matt Borgia figuratively wears mad hats. Art director by day, working painter by night, dog owner, whiskey drinker, surfer, the list goes on.
Whether she’s spurring a revolution or attempting to awaken your inner flower child, Meier creates retro-inspired magic with each piece of art she shares under the brand name Harley and J.
Let’s be real: life is just one big beta test. Maybe someday someone will learn how to work out the racking kinks. Then again: a life without determining ups and downs would be dull (at best), which is why we turn to Swiss artist Sarah Haug, whose work, like that of gonzo artists before her, is influenced by her own lived-in moments.
Creatives and co-curators Katja Horvat and Paige Silveira bring us nineteen self-established young artists, varied in medium but certainly not in taste.
New York-based artist Llew Mejia tells us about his new tattoo practice, being more of a hobbyist than a career man, and his two Cornish Rexes and Sphynx that cohabitate his studio.
Just as kind, warm, and inviting as her pieces, Sophie Ruiz shares her ideas about simplicity, authenticity, and the sheer importance of living and creating by your truth.
On an unusually overcast morning in Los Angeles, artist Tofer Chin prepares a hot pot of coffee as he lets six canvases air from a series of acrylic dip dyes.
Fearing that America is on course toward a new form of fascism, LA-based artist, Cleon Peterson, boldly challenges us to acknowledge the darkness intrinsic within us in his new exhibition, Blood & Soil.