Latest Stories
Most recently published stories in Art.
Memory as Fragmented Body
I return, again, to Anonymous—an artist I have followed for some time, and one I continue to regard as a rare source of fresh air within the visual language of the 21st century. There is a persistence in this practice, a refusal to resolve too quickly, that feels increasingly vital.
By Thelma Golden5 days ago in Art
Scottish Racism
I am venturing northwards and I have a job offer. As I journey north, the people of the lowlands send me warnings and messages to be wary of strangers. I stop at the side of the road and need help so I wander into a village to repair my car. I discover an inn, at Tain and the locals are mysterious, they keep to themselves and don’t say much at all. I told them to help me but they are timid. They gave me looks and speak with words I am not really aware of like “like” in every sentence. The English warned to keep my distance, but I thought I would say to the highlanders that I myself have a Scottish surname, Fraser, and they soon warm up that these people are the nicest and warmest people. They spoil you rotten with lavish gifts and food and a warm fire. Nothing like the crazed and violent highlanders that the English told me about. I am sort of confused as to why they would say something like that, the English gossip and publish cartoons of Bonnie Prince Charlie as a rogue and they did the same thing to Napoleon.
By Karl McBeath5 days ago in Art
The Woman He Played
I painted this piece from a place of deep thought about relationships and control. At first, it looks like a man playing a guitar, with three women standing behind him. But to me, the guitar is not just an instrument — it represents a woman. The way he holds it, the way he plays it… it feels more personal than just music.
By Damola adejare6 days ago in Art
The Myth Reassembled Through Abstraction
Few titles carry the historical weight of Adam and Eve. For centuries the subject has been approached through figuration—two bodies, a tree, a serpent, a garden. The narrative is visually familiar long before the painting begins.
By Thelma Golden7 days ago in Art
Amazing Artwork by Roy Lichtenstein
American artist, sculptor, and lithographer Roy Lichtenstein was an amazing pop art artist. He became widely recognized for his bold use of imagery taken from comic strips and commercial art. His artworks often feature the Ben-Day dot technique, imitating the printing methods used in comic books. This method, paired with flat, vibrant colors, created a distinctive and recognizable style.
By Rasma Raisters7 days ago in Art
The Static Hour #7
The night rain hammered against the rusted wire fence, the dripping sounds grating in the deep darkness. Puddles spread across the muddy path, reflecting distorted, fragmented light, as if time itself had disintegrated here, abandoned in the silent, rainy night.
By Water&Well&Page7 days ago in Art
The Anonymous Artist Reversing the Order of Abstraction
In an art landscape saturated with gesture, spontaneity, and post-rationalized meaning, a quietly emerging anonymous artist is taking a markedly different approach. His work, rooted in biomorphic abstract expressionism, begins not with form—but with language.
By Thelma Golden7 days ago in Art










