Nabila Nabi is a weaving artist originally from Bangladesh. She moved to the United Kingdom after earning her MA in Art and Design from the University of Salford in Manchester.
Her tapestries are part of both private and public collections across Asia, Europe, Australia, the UK, and the USA.
INTERVIEW | Jin Kyeong An
Jin Kyeong An is a Korean artist, primarily working with painting. When it comes to work, it has the charm of capturing the eyes of visitors with its primitive colours and simple form that evokes the spirit of Henry Rousseau. Familiar and light colours and forms cross conventional boundaries, harmonising traditional and modern senses. She is now a full-time painter.
INTERVIEW | CHAMIN
CHAMIN’s work explores the fact that reality is ultimately beyond our control. By recombining impersonal fragments, unfiltered stream of stock video clips and random snapshots she finds online, CHAMIN builds her own set of visual “rules” and patterns, turning chaos into something personally meaningful. Her creative process is both an experiment in form and a way to find reassurance.
INTERVIEW | Xingyu Dai
As a photographer, Xingyu Dai is deeply interested in the overlooked, the unspoken, and the subtle moments that often go unnoticed in everyday life. For her, art serves as a powerful means to make the invisible visible, the unheard audible, and the ignored acknowledged. In the series Blade, the artist explores the pressure and judgment that modern women face regarding their bodies.
INTERVIEW | Taviana Unx
Taviana Unx is a Queer and Hispanic artist currently based in Milwaukee, WI. Their Taviana Unx’s main focus within their art is creating discussion about serious and taboo topics such as mental health and trauma. With their use of light colours and ethereal imagery, they enjoy being able to bring a focus to these heavy topics, yet create the illusion of otherwise.
INTERVIEW | Emma Shleiger
Emma Shleiger is a painter and researcher living on the shores of Lake Baikal. A representative of the classical Russian academic tradition, Emma preserves and evolves a school rooted in philosophical depth and technical mastery. Her work centres on the human figure, where form becomes a way of thinking, and painting, a reflection of meaning through presence and precision.
INTERVIEW | Randa Hijazi
Randa Hijazi is a Syrian-Canadian contemporary visual artist currently based in Laval, Quebec. Her early work combined Impressionism and Realism, but she recently embraced Surrealism through her ongoing series Human Threads, focusing on shared human experiences and cultural narratives. Her art reflects her journey across cultures, blending deep Eastern roots with Western influences.
INTERVIEW | Venture Awaits
Venture Awaits started to create photography in childhood. Always in awe of nature's beauty, photography became a way to express his appreciation for the environment around him. Through each image, Venture Awaits invites others to pause, look closer, and rediscover the beauty that surrounds us. Immerse yourself in the venture that this world has to offer.
INTERVIEW | Tomisin Egbonwon
INTERVIEW | Natalia Kaminskaya
Natalia Kaminskaya is a multidisciplinary artist currently based in Georgia. She explores a broad spectrum of media, including digital painting, pastel, acrylic, oil, gouache, ink, and mixed techniques involving texture paste, gold leaf, and modelling compounds. Her visual language is distinguished by rich emotional depth, vibrant detail, and a fusion of classical and contemporary influences.
INTERVIEW | Kan Pitichaichan
Kan Pitichaichan is a Thai-Japanese artist currently studying Fine Art at Parsons School of Design. Initially working mainly with painting, Kan used the medium to explore personal themes connected to culture, place, and memory. Kan is expanding his practice beyond painting and exploring new forms such as mixed media and installation.
INTERVIEW | Heliwan
Heliwan is a multidisciplinary artist and art director whose practice moves fluidly between 3D art, painting, and photography. With a background in visual storytelling and over nine years of experience in creative direction, his work explores the boundaries between the digital and the tactile, the constructed and the organic.
INTERVIEW | Linda He
Linda He is a visual artist based in San Francisco, California. Her practice explores the intersection of individual experience, emotional memory, and the complexities of intimacy and social interaction. Working primarily with acrylic on canvas, her paintings often combine abstraction with symbolic figuration and bold contrasts, capturing the nuanced rhythms of closeness, hesitation, and relation.
INTERVIEW | Gennady Lakoba
Gennady Lakoba is a Georgia artist currently based in Spain. He focuses on bronze and marble sculpture and drawings for tapestry projects. His use of shape analysis in his work allows him to read the human figure and any object. Gennady Lakoba strives to bring the presence of sculpture into the drawing as much as possible.
INTERVIEW | Paulina Wróblewska
Paulina Wróblewska is a self-taught Polish artist specialising in large-scale, hyperrealistic acrylic paintings. Her work focuses on animals, often portrayed in striking, emotionally resonant compositions that blend photographic precision with a strong painterly presence. Based in Poznań, Poland, she has quickly gained recognition for her technical skill and unique visual language.
INTERVIEW | Mark Vorobev - SA Sparrows
Mark Vorobev is a 20-year-old artist based in Saint Petersburg, Russia. He is a graphic artist, a comic artist, a painter, and a metal artist. He creates under the name SA Sparrows and thinks of his art as a form of therapy and a way to express feelings and states that cannot be talked about openly, such as gender dysphoria, body dysmorphia and depression.
INTERVIEW | HIROMI AOKI
Hiromi Aoki is a pointillist artist based in Yokohama, Japan. Using a 0.3mm pen, she creates intricate works composed of tens of thousands of dots to express memory, emotion, and quiet strength. Each dot she places is a quiet conversation with her inner self. Her works have been exhibited in the United States, the United Kingdom, Japan, and even at UNESCO World Heritage sites.
INTERVIEW | Viktoriia Vansovych
Viktoriia Vansovych is a self-taught contemporary artist currently living in the United Kingdom. Combining acrylics and charcoal powder on canvas, her work captures raw emotions and explores the balance between movement and stillness, light and shadow, and colour and contrast. Viktoriia continues to evolve her unique artistic language and has participated in several group exhibitions in the UK.
INTERVIEW | Emil Stoetzer
INTERVIEW | Bogdan Kanuka
Bogdan Kanuka is a multidisciplinary artist working with printmaking, painting, and sculpture. He focuses on linocut and monotype, using these techniques to explore how repetition, variation, and gesture can tell open-ended stories. His prints often include symbolic animals or invented figures that suggest inner states, memory, and change.



















