Critique
Dj Frizbee an illustration that I had done in highschool and when I was doing
Dj Frizbee is an illustration I did of a Dj I call Frizbee. I created DJ Frizbee when I was in highschool and this was around the time that I was doing tags around the school. Reina was an another graffiti piece that I did and a tagging name that I was trying on along with tags I was also creating pieces of my own as I had shown with this article.
By Revista Miko:XCI 2 months ago in Art
When Images Refuse Ownership
The history of modern art repeatedly demonstrates a stubborn truth: no image can ever be owned absolutely. Forms circulate, poses migrate, gestures recur, and meanings survive only insofar as they continue to work on people. Copyright, originality, and authorship may function as legal or institutional devices, but aesthetically they are always provisional. What ultimately matters is not where an image comes from, but whether it generates a lived response — a mood, a tension, a sense of story. Few contemporary paintings illustrate this more clearly than The Singing Butler (1992) by Jack Vettriano, a work that has become both one of the most reproduced images in Britain and one of the most contested.
By Peter Ayolov2 months ago in Art
Pakistan deploys helicopters, drones to end standoff with Baloch rebels. AI-Generated.
Pakistan Deploys Helicopters, Drones to End Standoff With Baloch Rebels Pakistan’s security forces have intensified operations in Balochistan by deploying helicopters and surveillance drones to break a prolonged standoff with Baloch rebel groups, underscoring the growing complexity of internal security challenges in the country’s largest and most volatile province. The move reflects Islamabad’s determination to restore control while balancing military pressure with political and social sensitivities in a region long marked by unrest.
By Sain Hafiz2 months ago in Art
When health insurance costs more than the mortgage. AI-Generated.
For millions of households, the monthly mortgage payment has long been considered the single biggest expense. Yet an uncomfortable shift is underway: in many families, health insurance premiums now rival—or even exceed—the cost of owning a home. This phenomenon is reshaping personal finances, altering career decisions, and raising urgent questions about the sustainability of modern healthcare systems.
By Sain Hafiz2 months ago in Art
Tom Morello: The Revolutionary Guitar Legend Shaping Modern Rock Music
Who Is Tom Morello? Born Thomas Baptist Morello on May 30, 1964, in Harlem, New York, Tom Morello grew up in Illinois before moving to Los Angeles to pursue music. He studied political science at Harvard University, a background that would later deeply influence his songwriting and activism.
By youssef mohammed2 months 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 Podcast2 months ago in Art
Why John LoPinto Values Intentional Travel Over Speed and Volume
In a world that celebrates movement and accumulation, travel has increasingly become about speed and volume. More destinations, tighter itineraries, and constant motion are often seen as markers of experience. John LoPinto takes a different approach. He values intentional travel over rapid consumption, believing that depth of experience matters far more than distance covered. For him, travel is most meaningful when it creates understanding, not just memories.
By John LoPinto3 months ago in Art
When the Artist Becomes the Art. Content Warning.
We like to think we can separate the art from the artist, but can we, really? Art is born from the same place as sin. It mainly emerges from conflict: between what is felt and what is permitted, between the self that is lived and the self that must be hidden. No figure embodies this tension more vividly than Oscar Wilde: a man who transformed his own contradictions into style, wit, and devastating clarity. His novel The Picture of Dorian Gray is not merely a tale of aesthetic decadence but the battleground on which this question is fought.
By Yasmine Lagras3 months ago in Art
The Uncopiable Human Wit to Write
We all have been in that spot at least once in our schooldays where we have been wringing our brains off to curate written articles of some sort until our soul-less friends were born. At just four years old, our beloved soul-less, metallic, digital assistant who is always by our side when we turn on our computers and smart phones, will be doing much more than curating written content for us all, if you know what I mean.
By Sound Savvy3 months ago in Art







