Seung-yeon Jung: Between Bodies and the Spaces They Share
Seung-yeon Jung builds quiet ecologies of belonging, turning distance and dialogue into painting, performance, and lived experience.
Seung-yeon Jung builds quiet ecologies of belonging, turning distance and dialogue into painting, performance, and lived experience.
A short art-world exorcism every Monday. One thought, one scream, one deep breath after.
Instagram is a $71 billion ad machine that doesn't owe you anything. You're creating free content for Meta's shareholders while calling it your 'art career.' Here's what nobody tells you: most artists on Instagram will never make a living from it. But let's be honest about why.
Ask Kurt brings three highlights from our latest features. Candy Bassas, Ailyn Lee, and Jie Zhang. Three practices in painting, each extending the medium into spaces of unease, intimacy, and temporal reflection.
Artist Taylor A. White talks with Di Franco about chaos, control, and why confusion might be the most honest outcome of all. A Munchies Art Club Conversation Series.
Ask Kurt brings three highlights from our latest features. Distinct practices from Taylor Anton White, Hunter Potter, and Lisa Klinger, artists reshaping how we look, sense, and imagine. Clear voices, sharp visions.
Artist Radar: Ask Kurt brings three selections from recent features: fresh looks from Tobias Izsó, Oľga Paštéková, and Ophelia Arc, artists who shape how we see, move, and think. Contemporary voices, crisp ideas, sharp visions.
Rica Fuentes Martinez turns fungi, microbes, and cellular forms into precise ink drawings, poetic systems where invisible ecologies become visible.
At the Woods Center, Xoromat (Khoren Matevosyan) unveils a new mural that expands his universe of woven myths into a bold public art statement.
Armenian artist Khoren Matevosyan (Xoromat) blends textile craft with digital worlds, reimagining folklore for a future still rooted in tradition.
Vienna Contemporary 2025 at Messe Wien: vivid encounters, sharp installs, and discoveries Munchies Art Club carries forward.
Parallel Vienna 2025 press day at the Otto Wagner Areal unfolded like rehearsal and revelation, mixing fresh discoveries with artists already on our radar.
Slovak painter Oľga Paštéková turns stains, bleaches, and ghosted lines into wolves, rivers, and lantern-houses, lyrical eco-paintings from Bratislava & Vienna.
Austrian artist Ju Aichinger transforms everyday materials into metaphors for queerness, intimacy, and social presence.
Ophelia Arc’s visceral textile sculptures stitch trauma, memory, and feminist psychoanalysis into haunting forms.
German painter Lisa Klinger reveals what happens when the body is treated as a product. Her art isn’t symbolic. It’s infrastructural.
Discover 11 curated art platforms where artists can submit their work, get featured, and be seen by curators, collectors, and real art audiences. From Artviewer to Munchies Art Club, here’s who’s still shaping what visibility means in 2025.
Interview with London-based artist Hetty Douglas and DiFranco for Munchies Art Club — on abstraction, emotion, and the raw power of materials like spray paint and cement.
Sopho Mamaladze, Georgian artist based in Tbilisi, blends myth, identity, and human-animal forms through layered figuration and multimedia practices.
Interview with Amsterdam-based artist Kirsten Hutsch by DiFranco for Munchies Art Club. Known for her bold material-based works, Hutsch blurs the line between painting, sculpture, and everyday gestures. A fresh voice in contemporary art.
Japanese artist Satoko Okuno crafts whimsical guardians in vibrant painting and ceramics, blending Shinto spirituality with emotional refuge.