General
How to Animate Photos Online: Turn Your Still Images into Moving Stories. AI-Generated.
In today’s visual-first digital landscape, static images are no longer enough to capture attention. Whether for social media, marketing campaigns, personal storytelling, or creative projects, animated photos and moving pictures consistently outperform still images in engagement and retention. This growing demand has led to the rise of AI-powered tools that allow anyone to animate photos online—no design skills or video editing experience required.
By Sarah Allison16 days ago in Art
Ken Wolverton
By Brian D’Ambrosio Along a dusty roadside of Cerrillos, connected weathered shacks lean into the landscape like a creature molded from the earth itself. Its walls are alive with color: horses rearing across mesas, dreamlike murals, and abstract forms that seem to vibrate with movement. Inside, brushes slant in jars, canvases are stacked against walls, and unfinished murals climb wooden planks. This is the world of Ken Wolverton, an 80-year-old artist whose life has been as itinerant and unconventional as the art he creates.
By Brian D'Ambrosio 18 days ago in Art
Truth Is Often Rejected Because It Demands Change
There is a widespread assumption, rarely spoken but deeply believed, that truth will eventually be accepted if it is communicated clearly, patiently, and with genuine goodwill. When resistance appears, the instinct is to search for error in tone, framing, or explanation. The underlying belief is simple: if the truth were presented well enough, rejection would disappear. This belief is comforting, but it is false. History, Scripture, and lived experience all point in the same direction. Truth is often rejected not because it is unclear, but because it is costly.
By Peter Thwing - Host of the FST Podcast18 days ago in Art
The Art Behind Superhero Cake Toppers and Why Handcrafted Details Matter
Superhero Cake Toppers sit at an interesting crossroads between pop culture, craft, and personal celebration. They may appear small and fleeting, yet they often carry outsized emotional weight. In recent years, these miniature figures have shifted from simple novelty items to thoughtfully made keepsakes that reflect storytelling, creativity, and care. Understanding why handcrafted details matter begins with recognizing that these toppers are not just decorations, but tiny sculptures shaped by cultural meaning and human skill.
By Rochelle Martinez19 days ago in Art
Review: Children of the Whales, first 3 episodes
I grew up upon anime. “3000 Miles in Search of a Mother”, “Nils Holgersson”, “The Moomins”, studio Ghibly, etc. but nowadays Netflix anime (their original ones, or at least some) is empty artstype wise, content wise. Repetitive. Plus, there’s a theme of violence and women opression (at least in some past animes) that is unclear and unethical.
By Maya Or Tzur20 days ago in Art
Review: Tom Morris' "Othello" at the Theatre Royal Haymarket, London
In December of 2025, I had the privilege of seeing Tom Morris' rendition of Shakespeare's "Othello", performed at the Theatre Royal Haymarket in London's West End, starring David Harewood (Othello), Toby Jones (Iago), and Caitlin Fitzgerald (Desdemona).
By Andrei Babanin25 days ago in Art
I Died For 40 Minutes - Here's What It Taught Me About life
Dying doesn't normally give a person new life - yet that is exactly what happened to Patrick Charnley. He was a high-flying lawyer, who viewed downtime as "wasted time", restlessly pushing himself to success.
By Ibrahim Shah 27 days ago in Art
'Till Death We Do Art. Top Story - February 2026.
There would be nothing divine in this world without art. Nature may surpass the divine to all intents and purposes, but like everything it absorbs and is absorbed by, it remains here, stuck on the surface of this world, ever-present, physically bound to the universe.
By Avocado Nunzella BSc (Psych) -- M.A.P 28 days ago in Art











