Shocking Global Warming in the Antarctica Number 1 Tragedy at the Pole
One of the most critical indicators of global warming can be found in Antarctica. The peninsula has been one of the most rapidly warming areas of the world over the past fifty years. Since 1955, the upper ocean temperatures just west of the Antarctic Peninsula have increased by more than one degree Celsius.
Bad Bunny Secrets: 13 Things You Missed During Bad Bunny’s Historic Halftime Performance
There are shows that entertain… and shows that pull the soul forward so hard it forgets...
Digital Giraffe: When Bodies Dream in Code
Digital Giraffe: When Bodies Dream in Code by Viviana Puello.Digital Giraffe, the...
HelenKagan HealingArts
What if color knew more about you than language ever could?
Not the decorative kind. Not the fashionable kind. But color as intelligence—color that senses fracture, registers memory, and moves instinctively toward balance. This is the terrain Helen Kagan inhabits, not as a metaphor, but as a daily practice. Her paintings do not announce themselves as solutions. They arrive as presences—alert, responsive, alive.
Around the World: When the Camera Meets the Road
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Artists to Watch 2026: The Ones Who Are Already Shaping What Comes Next
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Roxy Sora
To look at a painting by Roxy Sora is to witness movement stilled in time — the silent music of color unfolding before the eyes. Her work is an experience of energy, rhythm, and emotion translated into form. Each piece is a living performance, an improvisation of pigment and gravity where paint moves the way sound moves — fluid, unpredictable, alive.
Monika Bendner
In the world of Monika Bendner, color is not decoration — it is declaration.
Her work lives at the edge between form and feeling, where the human face, the rose, and the line all become languages of transformation. Each image she creates is an act of translation — a bridge between what is seen and what is sensed, between the tangible and the imagined.
Neela Pushparaj
There’s a moment, just before the brush touches water, when everything is still.
The world holds its breath — and then color begins to flow.
In that instant, something sacred happens.
That’s where Neela Pushparaj lives — in the delicate space where intention meets surrender, where light turns to emotion, and creation becomes communion.
Ric Conn
Some artists paint to express. Ric Conn paints to awaken. His canvases are not quiet meditations on beauty — they are bold declarations, visual revolutions, uncompromising testaments to the power of art as activism. Through color, texture, and intensity, Ric transforms paint into protest, and silence into sound. He doesn’t ask for permission to speak — he demands to be heard, not for himself, but for those the world too often ignores.
Herb Bardavid
There are photographers who document moments, and then there are those who reveal the soul behind them. Herb Bardavid belongs to the latter kind—an artist whose work transcends observation to become a profound act of empathy. His lens doesn’t merely capture what’s visible; it listens to the heartbeat beneath the surface. Through his eyes, photography becomes an instrument of connection—a way of restoring dignity, memory, and truth to the faces that define our shared humanity.
Wendy Cohen
There is a moment, when standing before a painting by Wendy Cohen, when the eye stops searching for form and begins to listen. What at first appears as movement and abstraction slowly turns into rhythm — a visual pulse that speaks of energy, balance, and the invisible threads that connect all living things. Wendy’s art is not simply seen; it is felt. It is an experience of color as consciousness, structure as emotion, and matter as memory.
Hélène DeSerres
There are artists who seek to portray the world as it appears, and then there are those rare few, like Hélène DeSerres, who reveal the world as it feels. In her luminous abstract compositions, Hélène transforms the act of painting into an intimate dialogue with light—a conversation that transcends form and language. Through color, gesture, and rhythm, she captures what words cannot hold: the quiet pulse of emotion, the whisper of memory, the shimmering presence of the unseen.