Latest Stories
Most recently published stories 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 Goldenabout 23 hours 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 Raistersa day 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&Pagea day 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 Goldena day ago in Art
Rising Tensions: A World on the Brink of Conflict
The image before us captures a dramatic and symbolic moment—one that reflects the growing tension between global powers and the ever-present risk of war. At the center stands Donald Trump, portrayed with a determined and resolute expression, facing what appears to be Iranian military forces across a battlefield filled with chaos, fire, and destruction.
By Fazal wahid a day ago in Art
Mona Lisa painting
Few works of art in human history have captured the imagination of the world quite like the Mona Lisa. Painted by the legendary Italian polymath Leonardo da Vinci during the height of the Renaissance, this iconic portrait continues to fascinate scholars, artists, and admirers centuries after its creation. Its enduring appeal lies not only in its technical brilliance but also in the mystery and subtlety that surround it, making it one of the most studied and celebrated paintings ever produced.
By shaoor afridi2 days ago in Art
Captain De Cuellar and His Adventures
The Spanish Armada set sail to land ashore on English soil. 100 galleons with 1,000 Iberian sailors on each to land in England, in the belly of the beast. They were foiled at sea and fled journeying around the Hebrides, the last survivors were dogs, washed ashore on the West Coast, terriers that would over the centuries be westies named “Jock” posing for shortbread tins. The rest of the crews landed at Streedagh Beach, Sligo. The Gallowglass enlisted by the English took their claymore to the Spanish swines and let the beach wallow in their blood, bespectacled with Latin bodies. Few were saved for being Catholic and the rest were on the run, they ventured north and it was Captain De Cuellar who ventured to Connaught and Ulster, precariously not knowing when each night might be his last. The souls he lost on his watch haunting his every step, their spirits and blood soaking into the land and people, the black hair of the west, the strength to repel the English on the rocks and ground, through famine and purposeful pain and passing. The millions of skeletons that would perish and the language that would fervently remain; the shadow of the nation would be seeping with blood of sacrifice like a bog of an ancient bard, or a fighter who was a Milesian sparring with the supernatural force, the Tuatha De Nannan. As the clock would be covered and the death would be celebrated with a wake - De Cuellar was petrified by these lands, and he wrote his journal, begging for help from the king abroad.
By Karl McBeath2 days ago in Art










