Techniques
Graffiti is not a crime.
I love grafiti. It is a form of art, and it is also a language of the streets. It is in no way, size, shape or form a crime of any kind. The streets is the canvas and the museum with which the artists who create graffiti can put their work. One of my favourite things to do is to take photos of the graffiti that i see and i have put them all in a collection on instagram named after the classic Prince album and movie "Graffiti Bridge". Graffiti is art and it is an insult to the artists when it is covered and destroyed.
By Revista Miko:XCI 21 days ago in Art
A journey to learn crochet, the hobby that changed my life
Hello everyone, how are you? Today I'm going to tell you about my complete crocheting journey, how I learned to crochet. I might have learned crochet at a young age, but I'll also tell you how crochet helped me on my journey.
By Ashrakat Elnagy22 days ago in Art
The Paintings of Bouchra Belghali
By Brian D’Ambrosio To stand before a painting by Bouchra Belghali is to experience something closer to listening than looking. It unfolds the way music does—not by telling a story or depicting a recognizable scene, but by setting color into motion, allowing it to vibrate, collide and resolve into feeling. Like a melody unburdened by lyrics, it bypasses explanation and goes straight to sensation.
By Brian D'Ambrosio 26 days ago in Art
Actor Andreas Szakacs on AI Cinema as Szakacs Films Prepares Echoes of Tomorrow for May 2026
Szakacs Films is stepping further onto the international stage with the announcement of several new global projects, led by the upcoming feature film Echoes of Tomorrow, currently targeting a May 2026 release. The announcement reflects a broader creative shift for the company, signaling a deliberate move toward future-focused storytelling that engages with emerging technologies and contemporary cultural questions.
By Andreas Szakacs28 days ago in Art
Essence, Embodiment, and Relational Reality
The Failure of Reduction and the Need for Synthesis There is a persistent failure in many modern attempts to explain what a human being is. Some frameworks reduce the person entirely to matter, insisting that identity, consciousness, morality, and meaning are nothing more than emergent properties of physical processes. Other frameworks move in the opposite direction, detaching spirit from reason and grounding belief in intuition alone, often at the cost of coherence or accountability. Both approaches fail because both misunderstand essence. One denies that essence exists at all. The other treats it as something vague and undefinable.
By Peter Thwing - Host of the FST Podcastabout a month ago in Art
The Quick-Witted Hero
After a long day of intense labor under the scorching sun, Adnan finally got a short break for lunch. His throat was dry from hunger and thirst, and his body felt exhausted. Adnan worked as a security guard in a large company, a job that demanded not only physical endurance but constant mental alertness. Standing for hours in extreme heat, watching every movement around him, and staying vigilant at all times was not an easy task. Even a moment of negligence in such a job could turn into lifelong regret.
By Sudais Zakwanabout a month ago in Art








