Olivia Brazier’s artwork sucks you in by her use of delicious colours and familiar imagery all applied with the same brush of intelligent mockery from a female stance.
All in Arts & Culture
Olivia Brazier’s artwork sucks you in by her use of delicious colours and familiar imagery all applied with the same brush of intelligent mockery from a female stance.
Artist David Shillinglaw takes you on a journey to explore lands of colourful creations that buzz with gentle familiarity.
Koko Brown creates experimental pieces of musical performance, resiliently telling her stories through a blend of spoken word and looping sounds.
Illustrator Nabigal – Nayagam Haider Ali has created a world of characters which shine with childlike appeal.
Stanley Chow’s work is both retro and unique. The cartoonist and illustrator has contrived a double decade career out of minimalist portraits that have been seen all over the world.
British Artist George Butler illustrates stories of ordinary people in extraordinary circumstances in places such as Afghanistan, Syria and West Africa.
From the age of 14 Percelle Ascot was certain he wanted to be an actor. He sure that his early decision would put him four or five years ahead of his peers with the same dream.
Olga De la Iglesia enthusiastically uses her eyes as tools to uncover details in the random truths of everyday life.
Afropunk Paris. The annual and infamously black arts festival has been celebrated in Paris, France for the past two years; 11 years after it’s initial debut in Brooklyn, New York.
London based French artist Alix Marie works interconnectedly between the two creative fields of photography and sculpture; producing her exceptional three-dimensional installations and objects which hint to a single specific notion: TOUCH.
Kayleigh Daniels Dated is a series of short sex stories drawing attention to the realities of female sexuality.
Born in 1990, self-trained Ethiopian photographer Girma Berta, utilizes the camera of his iPhone to capture unique images which record the daily lives of people of his hometown, Addis Ababa.
One-third of the female dance group, CEO Dancers, who found fame as 2013 semi-finalists on Britain’s Got Talent, she remembers that period as an opportunity to fly the flag for African dancing.
SPECTRUM is reinterpretation of the dated archetype of a man, which operates in the mainstream culture.
Using the audacious art of cabaret to discuss gender, sex, colonialism and mental health, sounds like something that would tip the credibility scales into cringeworthy territory. Not so in the case of neo-burlesque troupe Hot Brown Honey.
Luis Alberto Rodriguez, New York born and raised creative, has managed to depict this link between dancing and photography using the human body as his key tool.
Pride is over; and for most that means their yearly quota of rainbows, sparkles, drag queens and club kids has officially been fulfilled. However, what always gets lost in pride season, particularly in recent years, is that pride, the event, started as a riot.
South Korean based illustrator and animator Inji Seo’s creates characters who are bold, curvy and beautiful.
‘Reaching Europe’ is a photographic series by Danish documentary photographer Sofie Amalie Klougart. The series documents the conditions of African migrants after arriving on the Italian coast of Sicily.
Jessica Gao is an American screenwriter of Chinese descent who first chiselled her way into the industry when she won Nickelodeon’s screenwriting fellowship.