Digital Art
Spotlight on…

Digital Art by Donald Patten
“I have created a series of drawings that represent my experiences in modern COVID life by drawing inspiration from past masterpieces that depict the embodied experience of trauma.”

Heroin Kids
by Tobias Sallewsky
“Whether it's a fleeting bird in a tranquil landscape or a burst of unexpected light and color in a cityscape, I capture scenes that invite viewers to ponder and explore.”

Digital Art by Phyllis Green
“I thought it might be fun to draw small scenes you might see in someone's home. So, I made up table decorations, wallpaper, and tablecloths. I found it to be great fun, and I hope you like them.”


Digital Art by N. Mori
“My digital art lives at the intersection of pop culture and creative impulse. Each piece begins with a lyric or a quote that sparks a mental image: something playful, nostalgic, or familiar…”

Photography by Yazmin Munoz
“Through my creative work, I seek to highlight the seemingly mundane to connect and heal together.”


Scottish Dreams
A Photo-Haiku Sequence
Poetry by Gabriel Rosenstock and Photography by Ron Rosenstock
“the druid’s breath / fills the sky / above the standing stones”

Digital Art by Guilherme Bergamini
“My works dialogue between memory and social political criticism. I believe in photography as the aesthetic potential and transforming agent of society.”

Bs of the Beach
Digital Art by Karen Anderson
“My artwork is about telling the stories of the marginalized life and the people who live it.”

Digital Art by Alexander Limarev
“Artwork, as viewed by Alexander Limarev, is the way to speculate upon and explain to yourself such universal existential problems as a person’s life, double standards and their influence on individuals, public loneliness, social impotence, search of God, resistance to Evil.”


Digital Art by Jeffery Alfier
“I leave it to the viewer’s eye to evoke new narratives from my collages. I reassemble them from intimate, yet anonymous image fragments, suggestive of emotional pathos — like a shadow text, or understated intimations.”
