
Ann Marshall grew up in Atlanta, Georgia and earned her BFA from School of Visual Arts in New York City. She has worked in a gallery, illustrated an award winning children’s book on the Holocaust, and traveled nationally and internationally as an ethnographer and consumer anthropologist . Her fine art work has been exhibited in New York City’s Gallery at Lincoln Center. She now works as a portrait and fine artist, working with a combination of traditional media and paper collage.

The gorgeous pin-up part of one of the projects of the Russian photographer Irina Davis.
Because of the devastation of World War II, Russian “girls” in the ’40s and ’50s were taught to be tough and work hard. I am saddened by the fact that Russia never had the chance to enjoy the happy pin-up times of America’s postwar period. In fact, cheerful American pin-up art was considered in Soviet Russia to be politically incorrect, decadent and flat-out immoral, the product of a culture that could never understand the true nature of the human condition.
By photographing exclusively Russian immigrant women in traditional all-American pin-up poses, I am inventing my own genre of Russian pin-up. My concept is to portray pure beauty, femininity and sexuality, not to objectify but to empower. To those who identify the clues in my work, hidden to most non-Russian eyes, I am telling the story of a crisis of Russian national identity, and the frustration and confusion of self-identification with the Old Country, the New World and a diaspora caught between them. My goal is to bridge the gap and seduce the spectator with alluring imagery, trapping him into empathizing with a foreign element.
Kate MccGwire
Kate MccGwire’s work asks questions about the very nature of beauty. She’s intrigued by the possibility of envisaging beauty as something more complex than merely what delights the senses: beauty can be about a problem; it can be something that repels you or makes you question the status quo. The idea that it is a cultural phenomenon, susceptible to argument through the creative process, fascinates her. Continue reading »
Heiko MĂĽller
Heiko MĂĽller is based in Hamburg, Germany. Outside his native country his paintings and drawings have been shown in Estonia, New York, Paris, Basel, Seattle and Los Angeles. Much of his art is about the dark goings-on behind nature and animal kingdom. Continue reading »
Michael Bradley

India ink on linen
Story Books
Stephanie Brown

Stephanie Brown is an incredibly talented artist. She is very skilled technically, metaphysically, and her compositions are righteous. Continue reading »
Yuta Onoda

Yuta Onoda is a very talented illustrator and artist originally from Japan. Now he’s been working on his Bachelor of Applied Arts at the Sheridan College in Canada. Yuta’s work is really cool and inspiring, sometimes quite intriguing. Continue reading »

Miso has been working as a street artist for 5 years, combining fine art approaches to wheatpasted and painted works on the streets. Her works serve as documentation of things that would otherwise be forgotten, both in subject matter and in that her work is itself temporary, as it becomes weather-beaten and decayed on the streets. Miso has exhibited her drawn works worldwide, on the streets and in galleries, and currently lives in Melbourne, where she works with the Mitten Fortress artist collective. Continue reading »
Louise aka Art&Ghosts

Louise aka Art&Ghosts creates stunning digital paintings/illustration. She uses photoshop /wacom combo to meticulously handcolor each image.These are inspired from a plethora of sources, including fairytales, mythology, dolls, spectres, dreams and nature. Continue reading »
Dorota Mytych

Using materials such as tea and sugar Dorota Mytych (born in Poland) recreates photographs sculpturally in order to video them. Her images appear on screen slowly, particle by particle and stay quietly with the viewer. Once the image has coalesced, the process is reversed and the image breaks piece-by-piece leaving nothing but an empty white screen. Continue reading »
pato

Pato is a Portugese artist who creates figures in acrylic, oils, watercolour, mixed
paint or digital. “They are set in a larger frame, a humanity more artistic
than human transpires from them. And the eyes? In bitter-sweet contrast, with
strong expression and dominance, Rodrigo Canhão’s characters’ eyes are sometimes
tormented and sometimes as hard as steel, also the eyes of an inquisitor. They
are also tragic at times, deep as moons, other times innocent, old eyes; and
sometimes they are empty of deep silences (the presence/absence duality, eyes
of memory-shadows that stare hypnotically. Such a frontal look seems to see
nothing but always hints at uneasiness and disquiet.” Saw some of his paintings
in an exhibit here earlier this month. When looking at these fabulous little
people, I was always wondering what was going on with them. Have a look for
yourself at his many creations! (Belinda Schneider, Jun/07 )






































