Some selected works by designer/illustrator Jack Whittington. He creates simple designs with playful and occasionally inappropriate subcontext that keeps you viewing.
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Me & MY OTHER ME by artist Fulvio Obregon
The series features Michael Jackson, Steve Jobs, Paul McCartney, and other famous figures, reinterpreted through Obregon’s distinctive illustrative style. The younger “green” versions of these icons add a fantastical and humorous layer, prompting viewers to consider the passage of time and personal evolution.
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Art by Julia Petrova
Russian-based illustrator Julia Petrova creates intriguing and stylish works using watercolors, blending delicate brushwork with modern graphic sensibilities. Her pieces often feel like a crossroads between fashion illustration, typography, and symbolic storytelling, resulting in art that is both visually striking and conceptually layered.
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Donald Trump Portrait Painted with Artists Menstrual Blood
Donald Trump has been standing behind statements many people find appalling and baffling. His possible run for office has led him into countless situations where his blunt opinions are made constantly known. A specific event where Trump stated that Fox News presenter Megyn Kelly was only being critical of him because she was on her period. In retaliation Oregon based artist Sarah Levy created a portrait of Donald Trump with her very own menstrual blood. The portrait is “Whatever” and will be going on sale with the proceeds going towards an immigrants’ rights organisation. “That he thinks he can bring up the healthy functioning of women’s reproductive systems to insult women’s intelligence is a big problem…
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Art by Marco Rea
Italian artist Marco Rea explores the delicate intersection of beauty and unease in his haunting series of portraits. Drawing from personal dreams, experiences of lost intimacy, and the complexities of mental illness, Rea transforms familiar faces into visions that feel both intimate and unsettling. Each piece invites viewers to confront emotions that are often hidden, presenting them in a visual form that is simultaneously alluring and disquieting.
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In the Clouds by artist Yang Cao
Artist Yang Cao mixes portraits with clouds. The variety includes from stormy to sunset pink. The people featured in the portraits match their clouds, and like people they are something ever-changing and unpredictable. “I like the unpredictability of the cloud. It’s shapeless and changes all the time, it follows the wind and never stays in one form and place. Somehow I find this as a resemblance to our human nature and mind.” -Yang Cao
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Predator vs. Prey by Alex Solis
In each illustration, both predator and prey are rendered with wide, doe-eyed innocence. Despite their soft, cartoonish appearance, the narrative remains true to nature. The predator ultimately does what it must, creating a sharp contrast between adorable visuals and raw instinct.
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HOLLOW CHILDREN by BJÖRN GRIESBACH
Illustrator Björn Griesbach presents a haunting series titled Hollow Children. The work features portraits of children whose faces are blacked out or blurred, leaving only their bright white teeth visible in a range of unsettling, hollow smiles. The contrast between innocence and eeriness creates a striking, almost cinematic tension.
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Robert-Maurice Debois by Brice Krum
“Robert Maurice is very far from the Gaia planet in the globular cluster M13. After catching the Arecibo message he decided to go on earth. I had the idea of this series because I was looking to create a free personage that allows me to shoot anywhere, anytime. Make an observer of our planet. Then I met Robert. I created him a Facebook account, Instagram, and I even registered with a dating site, Tinder. Through social networks he can express himself, observe the influence of appearance, for example, he likes to play dummies. My goal is far from the usual standards of beauty.” By Brice Krum Find him on popular…
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Paintings by artist Michael Reeder
American artist Michael Reeder creates striking impressionist portraits that combine strange, surreal elements with layered symbolism. His work plays with proportion, distortion, and color to produce imagery that is both visually arresting and conceptually rich.
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A Kissable Coffee Lid
I love coffee, you love coffee, they love coffee. It’s time to make things a bit more intimate. Korean based designer Jang Wooseok has created a coffee lid replicating kissable lips. They vary from color and ethnicity too. Wooseok states “Take-out coffee is a symbol of city culture and fashion,” [The] shape of a lip is a distinctive style, thereby the combination will be fun.”