Australian photographer Donna Stevens’ Idiot Box series is both haunting and strangely familiar. The collection features young children staring blankly at the television, their expressions frozen in a glazed, almost hypnotic state. It’s a quiet commentary on modern life, childhood, and the early influence of screens in shaping attention and imagination.
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“2 Kinds of People” Illustration Series
We are usually split two groups, the blog 2kindsofpeople shows simplistic side by side illustrations of both sides of each group. From how you split your sandwich or organize your phone apps. Which category do you identify with? Related articles Paper Anniversary! Guitar Hero Live dev diary shows you how the live-action elements were created Facebook Autoposter ISIS leader confirmed killed by U.S. forces
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Love by artist Raphaëlle Martin
Love by artist Raphaëlle Martin is a mixed media series that feels intimate without being sentimental. It explores romance not through grand gestures, but through restraint. By removing most of the visual noise, Martin asks us to focus on connection itself. The result is quiet, emotionally charged, and unexpectedly tender.
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Taste Buds series by Philip Tseng
Philip Tseng’s Taste Buds series is exactly what it sounds like playful, charming, and a little bit mischievous. Each illustration pairs foods that belong together, creating tiny narratives that are instantly relatable. It is whimsical, clever, and somehow comforting, like seeing old friends reunited in the most unexpected way.
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Bystander by artist June Lee
June Lee’s Bystander is a sculpture that quietly examines the tension between human connection and isolation. At first glance, it may seem simple, but there is a deep, unsettling resonance in the way the piece confronts our social instincts. It is a reminder that humans are inherently social creatures, yet intimacy and understanding do not always follow naturally.
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Hollywood Street Characters by photographer Ken Hermann
Ken Hermann’s series Hollywood Street Characters captures the surreal energy of everyday people playing larger-than-life roles. Set against the streets of Los Angeles, the series showcases individuals embodying iconic figures from pop culture, from superheroes to classic Hollywood legends. The images are equal parts whimsical and melancholic, offering a glimpse into the pursuit of the American dream, where ambition, fantasy, and reality collide.
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IDK About These Hotdogs Photography Project
IDK About These Hotdogs is a charmingly awkward and absurd photography project by a duo of New York City-based photographers. The series takes America’s most beloved guilty pleasure—the hotdog—and places it in situations that range from playful to bewildering, transforming a simple snack into a surprisingly expressive subject. Each image feels like a small narrative, strange yet endearing, inviting viewers to reconsider the everyday object in a new light.
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GIF Art by Cento Lodigiani
Cento Lodigiani brings a playful yet slightly twisted perspective to digital illustration through GIF art. Based in New York City, Lodigiani creates animations that are minimal in design but maximal in personality. The works hover between humor and subtle darkness, drawing the viewer in with simple motion that quickly becomes hypnotic.
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“Gender Roles” by Josh Anton
Gender Roles does not ask for permission. It walks straight into the tension between masculinity and feminine glamour and sets up camp. Photographed by Josh Anton, the series stars April Carrion, bringing a layered understanding of performance, identity, and beauty that feels lived in rather than theoretical.
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Sweet Dreams by artist Martha Rich
Sweet Dreams by Martha Rich feels like stepping into a candy colored subconscious where emotions are exaggerated, expressions hover somewhere between joy and confusion, and nothing takes itself too seriously. The series delivers bold, saturated paintings filled with wide eyed, pouty characters who look like they just woke up mid thought and decided to stay there.
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‘Descension’ by artist Anish Kapoor
There is something deeply unsettling about Descension, and that discomfort is exactly where its power lives. Installed inside a movie theater in Italy, the ever moving work by Anish Kapoor transforms a familiar space of passive viewing into something far more psychological. You do not simply watch this piece. You confront it.