When we met Laila Milevski a few weeks back at The Boston Hassle’s first New England Zine Fest, we were amazed by her raw abilities, perfectly bound into pocket... Read More...
As you may have realized by now, we like to keep busy. Between quarterly print magazines, we like to offer our latest obsessions in relevant arts and culture in the form of what we like to call a collaborative mini-mag.
There are three components that make artwork striking and standout: technique, practice and passion. When combined as a triad—rarely seen successfully—the work ... Read More...
Using a strikingly simple color palette and pairing the inclusive black and white with vital colorful details, Rachel Levit plays with faces and emotions often coupling unmoved faces with telling props—a realm of personal understanding built on great awareness and skill.
Style is one of those things that can be dangerous; It can go in and out of fashion or date quickly. What's most important is creating imagery that has quirk over and above aesthetic. Tim Lahan's images have exactly that.
Harley Jones is an illustrator and street artist based in Melbourne, Australia. Part of the original wave of graffiti in his hometown of Dunedin, New Zealand, some nine or ten years ago, Jones translates his bold, vibrant style between wall and print, pumping fresh illustrations into the world through all available channels.
Caricatures depict our exaggerated realities. They offer a lighter take on life and its nonsensical situations with inflated expressions, colors and stories; dreamscapes of real life, if you will. But what happens when the man behind the amplified doodle is the man within the amplified doodle?
Llew Mejia is an artist, illustrator, and maker. If you don’t recognize him by name, you might by his perfectly quirky and folklorish illustrations that we can't get enough of, or by his meticulously intricate designs that decorate the pairs of swim trunks for sale at your local Target store.