Illustrations by Evgenia Chuvardina
Illustrator with academic art background Evgenia Chuvardina easily creates striking artworks featuring daily basis topics in a twisted way.






Illustrator with academic art background Evgenia Chuvardina easily creates striking artworks featuring daily basis topics in a twisted way.
The artist Stefan Gunnesch describes his work as reinventing continuously, nothing lasts for an eternity which makes us conscious about being in the moment
Read full interview on @trendland
I bet I was not the only one floating an idea of a photo series with computer screens removed from photos of people engaged with them on daily basis. Photographer Eric Pickersgil went further and set up “Removed” project where he gently removes mobile phones from social zombies of our days or literally from ourselves. What if if the device suddenly disappeared - we might look lonely, slightly crazy or perhaps next to a person being ignored…
If you put a little of Bosch’s anthropomorphism, a bit of Egyptian wall paintings and shake it with modern street art - you definitely meet Nicola Alessandrini. Italian artist creates intricate murals full of sacral meanings and signs as well as graphic artworks that won’t let you go
Mous Lamrabat a self-taught photographer born in the north of Morocco, who moved to Belgium as a child. He creates images where Western and Moroccan aesthetics are mixed, twisted, fused - sometimes even clashed. Together, they exist in a unique universe that he has dubbed ‘#Mousganistan’.
via @vogueitalia
“Carlos Neda is a digital artist based in Tegucigalpa, Honduras. His CGI pink-tinted, surreal visualizations of imaginary spaces combine the retro charm of plush carpets and modernist rounded shapes with contemporary influences.
Solitary yet utopian – these dreamy landscapes focus on the ambience. The soft light, set design, the combination of colors. Neda creates abstract, far-off realities filtrated through the perspective of modern design.” via @trendland
“A 2019 graduate of the Royal College of Art's MA in Design Products, Giovannoni designed the soft silicone headphones to improve upon current bone-conduction audio technology.”
Like other bone-conduction headphones on the market, his design bypasses the eardrum and conveys sound as vibrations through the bones of the skull, directly to the cochlea — the "hearing" part of the inner ear.
Unlike any other device on the market, it does so via waterproof speakers that are fully immersed in liquid and then sealed in a pliable membrane. This membrane sits against a person's skin, transmitting sound vibrations through touch.
“I believe these are wasting an opportunity for a technology that has the potential of improving the music quality of common earphones and headphones.
Inmergo aims to unravel the undiscovered potential of bone conduction by delivering innovative and inclusive sound experiences that can improve the quality of our life.”
Read more on @dezeeen
Talented illustrator from Poland, David Planeta, shares his mythical creations on @Behance
“A fever dream of sweat, gold and Synthwave music.
Oligarchs is a retro-futuristic emotive concept based on photogrammetry and 3D kitbashing.
A love letter to the bulky low-tech aesthetics of the 80s.
A synergy of naked bodies wrapped in beautiful metals.
When fashion film meets Cyberpunk meets modern art.
The year 1988, Neo Berlin Art Precinct.
An aged mobster is cheated by his trophy wife.
A government executive vanishes.
A secret has been stolen.
A girl is on the run.
A data bird holds a valuable recording.
A self proclaimed prophet’s plan unfolds.
But on this day, the whole system is turned upside down as the powers shift.”
Trained as architect, self-taught digital artist Anastasia Kraynyuk shares her latest CG experiments with forms, colours, lights and shadows.
Talented illustrator from Kuala Lumpur shows off her skills. O.C.May likes to create personal illustrations to tell stories and ideas to her audiences. YOLO is what she always keep in mind, to complete her to-do-list in her life.
Futurist artist you may know since ages if follow us properly:) Alex Andreyev does not need a special introduction as his works say everything. Follow his “Separate Reality” series to get the atmosphere of post internet utopia
Starting as a street photographer and running the niche project “Catching the Corners” (@aerohockey) five years ago, helped Yevgeny quickly gain the attention among heavy media. Nowadays he works with major editorials but still challenges himself to push the boundaries of urban life documenting.
UNITY is a commercial project challenged by Ruslan Khasanov to create a merge of painted bubbles. After a painstaking process Ruslan managed to direct this mesmerising video piece worth to watch at least on 4K screens.
Polish artist Izabela Dudzik fascinates with her very own editorial style based on the mix of mediums she used to create each illustration
A seascape of sculptures in a historic New York City district. In celebration of the 2019 summer season at South Street Seaport, The Seaport District approached Wade Jeffree and Leta Sobierajski (or simply creative duo Wade&Leta) to create a large scale series of sculptures to liven the district for the summer of 2019. Inspired by coral and camouflage and the languid movements of algae and seaweed, their sculptures drift and sway as if being gently pushed by an underwater current.
They wanted to emulate the feeling of drifting through an unexplored world splashed with color and pattern by creating cavernous structures that would evoke an overwhelming seascape of multi-dimensional sculptures of varying heights and colours. A material inspiration comes from the nearby boats that have been docked at the Seaport’s harbour over many years; like boats, the material will gradually weather over time, replicating the way elements shift and change our environmental landscape as the seasons progress
During two weeks in March hundreds of Clear Channel’s digital billboards in Stockholm’s Metro were transformed into a digital art exhibition where 6 artists were asked to create a piece that would portray a unique positive feeling. The art was then triggered by people's real-time emotions — through analyzing the current mood of the citizens and their use of social media throughout the day. The aim was to help people feel happier and less stressed whilst commuting.
Motion designer Jesper Lindborg was tasked to portray the feeling of being safe. “The aim was to set a familiar yet abstract tone, using tactile objects and materials. The piece is divided into 3 sections; soft bodies, foam and cloth. Each represents different layers of protection however, all share the same caring and comforting aspect. The marble statue is not only a link that illustrates the fragile and beautiful but is also humanizing and identifiable.”
CG magician Ivan Beoulve tricks your eyes with hyper real digital artworks focusing a lot on textures and light just because photography is his main hobby