Robin Steven Moné is a multidisciplinary artist whose work emerges from rupture, silence, and resistance. His practice confronts psychological fragmentation and societal decay through sculpture, installation, and conceptual painting. His latest series, Infinity RELICS, consists of 200 unique mixed-media capsules that materialize human contradictions through form, texture, and symbolic compression.
INTERVIEW | Zijing Zhao
Zijing Zhao is a visual artist currently based in London, UK. Zijing Zhao’s interdisciplinary practice spans film, installation, and painting, using simulation as a method to create bodies and worlds. She names the entities she constructs Monstrous Bodies—beings in continuous states of generation, mutation, and transformation.
INTERVIEW | Nick Lyre
Nick Lyre is a digital artist and graphic designer/illustrator whose work bridges the gap between classical artistry and modern digital techniques. Drawing inspiration from the "masters of old," his style reflects a deep appreciation for traditional aesthetics, reimagined through a contemporary lens.
INTERVIEW | Jessica Kewei Lin
Jessica Kewei Lin is an award-winning user experience designer who crafts intuitive, pixel-perfect interfaces and seamless user journeys across complex, multi-platform ecosystems. Her forward-thinking, interdisciplinary approach consistently delivers products that reflect user aspirations and drive innovation at scale.
INTERVIEW | Manami Moriyama
INTERVIEW | Irene Molnár
Irene Molnár (1986, Buenos Aires) is a visual artist and researcher. She uses various supports where the body, nature and space are the three axes that she addresses. She takes references from cinema, theatre, and any culture or any human experience. Her work is characterised by the use of colour and its different densities.
INTERVIEW | Xinyu Yu
Xinyu is an artist and designer whose work harmonises the introspective poetics of Eastern traditions with the dynamic innovation of Western contemporary art. Now based in Phoenix, Arizona, Xinyu continues to explore creative possibilities, drawing inspiration from the diverse landscapes and cultural influences that shape her artistic vision.
INTERVIEW | Mikala Martinez
Mikala Clarise Martinez is a painter who lives in Los Angeles, California. She makes figurative abstract paintings primarily on unstretched canvas. Martinez focuses on using the environment surrounding her space as compositions for her paintings. She lets her intuition guide the colours that are chosen, along with the movements that are made by brush or palette knife.
INTERVIEW | Saniya Assembek
Saniya Assembek is a motion designer and director from Kazakhstan, now based in New York. With a background in engineering, she brings a structured, thoughtful approach to storytelling, blending visual rhythm, sound, and emotion in her work. In her breakout short film Soundtrack Your Life, she explored how a shift in sound could alter an entire emotional landscape.
INTERVIEW | Valya Papadopoulou
Valya Papadopoulou is a fashion Illustrator and designer with a background in chemical engineering, raised in Canada and currently based in Athens, Greece. A self-taught multidisciplinary artist, her work is deeply influenced by the intersection of these two distinct cultural and academic experiences, blending precision with artistic expression.
INTERVIEW | Min Kun Li
Min Kun Li (Sam Fisher) is a new media creator and art educator active at the forefront of digital art. His creations are based on digital media, completing the deconstruction of art and the contemporary translation of religious culture, and constructing a field with both spiritual and technological characteristics in virtual space.
INTERVIEW | Wataru Furuta
Wataru Furuta is a photographer and graphic designer based in Tokyo, Japan. In the series Hazama, Furuta focuses on the relationship between our memory and vision. He uses visual effects to blend the holy places he has seen with other landscapes that are traditionally and philosophically associated with those places, attempting to evoke the images that people have had of those places.
INTERVIEW | Madlyn (Alauda Georges)
Alauda Georges, also known as Madlyn, is an eighteen-year-old French artist, her art does not aim to impress, but to touch. Each piece is born from a fleeting thought, a phrase heard or spoken, a wound remembered, a moment of fragile clarity. In every line she draws, there is something of herself — a fragment of soul, a tender echo of her inner world.
INTERVIEW | Léa. M
Lebanese-Canadian artist Léa. M, currently based in the United Arab Emirates, brings a bold and uninhibited approach to contemporary painting. Entirely self-taught, she draws inspiration from post-impressionist and expressionist movements, channelling their emotive power and vibrant aesthetics into a style that is uniquely her own. Her work captures fleeting moments of joy.
INTERVIEW | Ayodeji Kingsley
Ayodeji Kingsley is a Nigerian-born artist based in Derby, United Kingdom, who predominantly works with metal in his sculptures. He infuses mediums to facilitate an interface between the subject and the viewer. Ayodeji draws inspiration from various sources, including everyday situations, nature, personal beliefs, and communication with other artists.
INTERVIEW | Siyu Zhong
Siyu Zhong is an emerging oil painter whose work blends surrealism, liminal spaces, and Daoist philosophy into a unique visual language. Growing up in China, they were fascinated by the quiet mystery of nature and the way memories can feel like shifting landscapes. This sense of fluidity and in-between spaces continues to shape her art.
INTERVIEW | Tinmin
Tinmin is a contemporary abstract artist known for pioneering an innovative technique that uses a lint roller to extract and manipulate fibres from vintage garments and fibrous materials. He transforms these elements into vibrant, textured compositions on paper, breathing new purpose and life into them. His work is characterised by striking abstract imagery, rich in colour and depth.
INTERVIEW | Green (Yong Woon Park)
Green (Yong Woon Park) is a South Korean artist based in London. His work explores emotional struggle, social tension and the psychological impact of modern life through explosive colour, raw textures and allegorical imagery. Deeply engaged in the politics of dystopian culture and its effects on the individual, Green’s practice transforms personal unrest into visual form.
INTERVIEW | Sondra Bernstein
INTERVIEW | Sofia Tsoi
Sofia Tsoi is a self-taught artist based in Hong Kong; her work often explores the complexities of human emotions and art. From digital to oil paints, Sofia is constantly experimenting with all types of mediums to capture her artistic and conceptual vision, born from the people, environment and objects that she sees in her day-to-day life.