Why Does December Turn Sparkle, Stress and Glitter Into an Existential Crisis?
Because December turns everyday chaos into sparkle, making mess feel magical and glitter the easiest way to stay joyful.
Because December turns everyday chaos into sparkle, making mess feel magical and glitter the easiest way to stay joyful.
Xiaozhou Liao transforms theatre thinking into contemporary sculpture. His installations mix stagecraft, politics and play to question how neoliberal spaces shape our lives.
Open calls and residencies often define âemerging artistâ as under 35, but real art careers donât expire. Hereâs why age limits in the art world are outdated.
Geerts' tattooed paintings meet Barkley's ceramic sculptures at HAGD Contemporary, Aalborg. Curated by Rasmus Peter Fischer.
Ellen Claes paints control panels, empty stairwells, and roadwork, infrastructure we ignore. Her Belgian practice asks: what if looking closer is resistance?
Visual artists donât get royalties when their work resells, even if it sells for ten times more. Maybe itâs time that changed.
Yes. Think Neo seeing the Matrix. Once you switch it on, the noise drops and the work reads. Catapult - uncensored
Let the tool make pictures. Artists make meaning. Thatâs non-replaceable.
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 IzsĂł, OÄŸga PaĆĄtĂ©kovĂĄ, and Ophelia Arc, artists who shape how we see, move, and think. Contemporary voices, crisp ideas, sharp visions.
Berlin-based painter Matthias Esch turns ornament and diagrams into humane structures, paintings where order rests on a living ground.
After 10 years of glitter paintings, Tin Trohar's "1996" at Klubhaus marks a radical respawn. Five paintings. One catharsis. On view at Klubhaus Wien by Alexander Giese and Christof Habres
Let the tool make pictures. Artists make meaning. Thatâs non-replaceable.
Often the brand banks it and calls it inspiration. The rare proper collab names and pays the artist. Same runway, two scripts, very different endings.
Charlie Stein's new exhibition explores memory, intimacy, and survival through painting as analog archive. Kunsthalle II, CCA Andratx, Mallorca, till December 2025. Munchies Art Club Friday Dispatch looks closer to the exhibition.Â
Seung-yeon Jung builds quiet ecologies of belonging, turning distance and dialogue into painting, performance, and lived experience.