• Art by Oscar Varona
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    Art by Oscar Varona

    Artist Oscar Varona creates a series themed in glamour, gore and anatomy. Consisting of dripping blood and other mixed media collage work. See some of his pieces below:

  • Collage Portraits by artist Rocío Montoya
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    Collage Portraits by artist Rocío Montoya

    Madrid based artist Rocío Montoya creates mixed media portraits that merge collage and photography into striking, experimental works. Each piece transforms a conventional portrait into something entirely unique, exploring texture, layering, and visual rhythm. It is beauty reinvented through fragmentation and imagination.

  • Artwork by Waldemar Strempler
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    Artwork by Waldemar Strempler

    German artist Waldemar Strempler is a master of form, technology, and imagination. Working as a sculptor, graphic designer, and visual innovator, he manipulates images to create new perspectives on the human body.

  • Mixed Media Art by Eugenia Loli
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    Mixed Media Art by Eugenia Loli

    “It’s important for me to “say” something with my artwork, so for the vast majority of my work there’s a meaning behind them. I usually do this via presenting a “narrative” scene in my collages, like there’s something bigger going on than what’s merely depicted. Sometimes the scene is witty or sarcastic, some times it’s horrific with a sense of danger or urgency, some times it’s chill. I leave it to the viewer’s imagination to fill-in the blanks of the story plot.” -Artist Eugenia Loli source:

  • Duplicity by artist Matthieu Bourel
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    Duplicity by artist Matthieu Bourel

    Matthieu Bourel’s Duplicity is a facial manipulation series that turns recognition into something strange and absorbing. Using duplicated elements from the same or related photographs, Bourel morphs old Hollywood starlets and actors into portraits that feel elegant at first glance, then quietly disturbing the longer you look.

  • Vintage Art by Federico Hurtado
    ART,  Misc.

    Vintage Art by Federico Hurtado

    Hurtado’s technique emphasizes the materiality of the books themselves. The covers and pages are not erased or replaced but become part of the work, framing the altered imagery and adding context and texture. This approach gives his pieces a layered quality, where past and present, original and altered, collide in visually striking ways. The original content of the books informs the new narratives, lending a sense of continuity while inviting reinterpretation.