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Art Club

Every month, The Verge’s designers, photographers, and illustrators gather to share the work of artists who inspire us. Now we’re turning our Art Club into an interview series in which we catch up with the artists and designers we admire and find out what drives them.

What lies beneath: filming gators in the Florida springs

This wildlife filmmaker documents the unseen beauty of freshwater ecosystems.

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What’s in the box?

What is the Vietnamese diaspora? The latest issue of McSweeney’s Quarterly tries to answer that question with a fake cigar box.

The beautiful, retro tech of two theatrical sound designers

Smart home skepticism and the joy of old-school hardware.

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Chris Ware explains how to draw strangers on the bus without getting arrested

The celebrated cartoonist talks anxiety, process, and the final installment of his Acme Novelty Datebook series.

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How one creator visualized AI by using very little AI

The artist behind The Verge’s ‘Friend or Faux?’ feature explains the practical effects behind its design.

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Space Vacation’s gorgeous prints celebrate fan-favorite movies

A look at Samar Haddad’s bold homages, from sci-fi to comedy.

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Mona Chalabi on storytelling, the power of data, and covering Palestine

Finding the human stories behind the numbers.

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A year in art on The VergeA year in art on The Verge
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The Verge’s 2023 in review
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Elizabeth Lopatto
What happens when an artist who’s famous on social media gets taken seriously by the mainstream art establishment?

Ben Davis wrote a review of artist Devon Rodriguez’s solo show called “Underground,” a nod to how Rodriguez rose to fame: doing portraits of fellow subway riders, giving them the portraits, and posting the whole thing to TikTok.

I tend to view the existence of a review as someone taking art seriously — even if the reviewer doesn’t like the art, it was worth considering thoughtfully. Rodriguez didn’t see it that way, and now Davis is writing about what happens when social media and the art world interact.

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Kudrat Wadhwa
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Kevin Nguyen
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Amanda Chicago Lewis
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Karl Poyzer on his creative journey, finding joy in 3D, and creating a Vimeo staff pick

How a director of photography learned to create without physical limits

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Simon Stålenhag puts a darker twist on his nostalgic sci-fi worlds

The Labyrinth’s ash-covered landscapes were ‘the only thing that felt relevant’

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Protest art leaves the streets

They painted boarded-up businesses, then scrambled to save the art

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The best new animators are making their names on TikTok

TikTok has become a thriving playground for animation

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The visual storytelling of Run The Jewels

El-P and Tim Saccenti break down the art of Run The Jewels

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33 powerful Black Lives Matter murals

Artists have turned boarded-up businesses into powerful Black Lives Matter art

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The healing power of Black art

A collection of art that’s kept me sane

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