• Sea Level Street Art by Hula (Sean Yoro)
    ART

    Sea Level Street Art by Hula (Sean Yoro)

    At first glance, it feels like a mirage. A woman appears to be resting in water, her body half submerged, her expression calm and unbothered by gravity or waves. Then you realize it is a wall. A seawall, a pier, a forgotten concrete edge. This is the quiet magic of Sea Level street art by Sean Yoro, who works under the name Hula.

  • ART

    Artwork by Jason Martin

    Jason Martin’s work lives in that thrilling in between space where painting starts behaving like sculpture and sculpture politely pretends to be painting. His pieces do not sit quietly on the wall. They protrude, ripple, swell, and catch light in ways that feel almost confrontational. You do not just look at them. You feel them, sometimes before you even realize why.

  • Wearable Cartoon Pants
    ART,  FASHION,  Misc.

    Wearable Cartoon Pants!

    DejaNeufHeures has created a line of hand-painted pants that bring cartoon aesthetics into the real world. Each pair is carefully crafted to mimic the exaggerated, whimsical qualities of animated characters, turning ordinary clothing into wearable art. The designs capture the bold lines, bright colors, and playful energy of cartoons while maintaining functional wearability for everyday life or special occasions

  • Double Vision Portraits by artist Alex Garant
    ART

    Double Vision Portraits by artist Alex Garant

    Alex Garant creates painted portraits that immediately grab your attention through a striking visual technique: the eyes. In her Double Vision Portraits series, each subject appears to have multiple eyes layered carefully on the face. The effect is both mesmerizing and slightly disorienting, like looking through a kaleidoscope or catching a reflection in fractured glass. This signature distortion gives the paintings a surreal energy that lingers long after you first see them.

  • Fear Expanded by artist Ryan Everson
    ART

    Fear Expanded by artist Ryan Everson

    Ryan Everson’s Fear Expanded is a striking exploration of perception and the subconscious. The work consists of large mirrored text sculptures placed thoughtfully within a landscape, creating a tension between proximity and distance. Up close, the letters are bold, dense, and physically imposing. Their reflective surfaces catch light, capturing the viewer’s attention immediately and emphasizing the weight of the words themselves.

  • ART,  CULTURE

    Japanese Game of Thrones Manga Covers

    The worldwide phenomenon of Game of Thrones has inspired countless adaptations, from television to fan art, but in Japan the novels take on a unique visual identity. Renowned artist Noriko Meguro reimagines the book covers in a manga style, giving each volume a distinctly Japanese interpretation while maintaining the spirit of George R.R. Martin’s original epic.

  • Conjurer’s Kitchen
    ART,  CULTURE,  Misc.

    Feed Your Morbid Sweet Tooth

    Conjurer’s Kitchen takes dessert to a dark, twisted level. Their cakes are not just sweets, they are mini horror scenes designed to shock and fascinate. From eerily lifelike baby heads to a full adult body recreated in frosting, these creations push the boundaries of culinary art.

  • Artwork by Faig Ahmed
    ART

    Artwork by Faig Ahmed

    Azerbaijani artist Faig Ahmed transforms traditional rug design into a modern exploration of form and perception. His work takes familiar patterns and textures from cultural rugs and reimagines them in a way that feels both playful and disorienting. The results are vibrant, dynamic, and visually striking, challenging the viewer to reconsider what is familiar.

  • Artwork by Joseph James
    ART

    Artwork by Joseph James

    Joseph James’ work is a study in linearity and spontaneity. Each piece balances precise lines with bursts of color, creating compositions that feel both deliberate and unpredictable. There is a rhythm to the placement of shapes and strokes, as if the canvas itself is guiding the artist’s hand.