All in art

Elda Eldorado

Moved by constant daydreaming, Elda Miniero is a multidisciplinary artist born in 1998 in Benevento, a small city in Southern Italy. Elda aka Eldorado on Instagram explores the intersection between a collective imaginary and her personal one building onto the whimsical fantasy of her graphically enticing imaginations.

O Future

“Nihilism is somehow embedded in our global culture at the moment. I am not a nihilist, I have way too many emotions to actuate non-meaning. I am in some way the opposite — everything to me means everything, and I believe in making even absurdity” Katherine & Jen — O FUTURE

Julia Beliaeva

Whether it is a war, or pandemic, every new cataclysm creates a glitch in reality, wrapping everything in a new paradigm. Fluidity of Julia Beliaeva’s practice ensures the ability to evolve within the brand new context. Thus, instead of rejection, the change of a paradigm facilitates responsive levels in her works.

Cielofuturo

Cielofuturo arises around the visual research of artist Francesco Tosini on feedback in natural and technological mechanisms, an exhibition project conceived with the support of Unframed 721 and Matta to bring the conversation on art, NFT and digital assets to a touchpoint.

VXCL

Resembling a mixture of Wallace and Gromit-looking clay animation, from the shinny life-like stance of the designs alongside clear, sleek digital artistry, vxcl touches on a unique direction to art.

Peter Wu+

“The friction created by tethering virtual environments to charged physical locations allows for critical conversation to be had around what these spaces represent and the historical and socio-political events that surround it. This type of speculative criticality is more difficult to achieve through visualizations located within fantasy”.

FeyFey

Inflatable garments, helmets with receding hairlines, and armpit cutouts are only a peek into the pieces that live inside Fey Fey Worldwide. Creating outfits that speak out, Fey-Fey is a designer that constantly challenges industry standards – for the low price of her soul.

Alfred Pietroni

“I think the creative language that Tarot cards use speaks to me both visually and conceptually. The fantastical, spiritual, and elemental narrative weaved throughout them has no doubt permeated my creative process.“ Alfred Pietroni

Jack Wedge

“I think creating animation in a game engine gives you a special malleability in your work, stemming from being able to work in an environment that is already rendered, alive, textured, lit up. It gives what you’re doing at the moment more opportunity for mistakes. It illuminates directions that wouldn't ordinarily have been taken if you were rendering out every frame through an ordinary 3d renderer.” - Jack Wedge

Matthew Stone

“I felt that there should be more space for credibly creating positive visions of the future, and that cultivating optimism would facilitate that process. I was keen to explore the idea but also had a personal and psychological need to hold onto, and intellectually advocate for its importance. As I interrogated the idea, I learned more about myself and how positivity can sometimes be oppressive.” - Matthew Stone on his exhibition ‘Optimism as Cultural Rebellion’.

New.Eyra

There are somewhat limitations in our physical world; however, we have great potential to explore a virtual world. We are at a turning point, our work suggests the change of our current era and aims to create value and purpose in the Metaverse” - NEW.EYRA

Franco Palioff

In the modern world, we are seeing a new influx of artists exploring digital and 3D creative explorations, especially since the pandemic hindering tactile processes. Artist Franco Palioff not only explores these modern ways of working, but addresses a duality in his work, as a creator of robotic creations, as well as a classic oil painter, considering the relativity between humanity and technology.

Bygone

Nostalgia as the emotive dimension that ties up an intricate net of references - an open love letter to anime, tech aesthetic, dark fantasy and medieval folklore - in Bygone’s digital collages — artist and DJ from Adelaide, Australia.

Emma Adler

Analysing the ties between facts, fake news and political phenomena, especially within right-wing populism, Emma Adler is a multimedia artist reflecting on the themes of virtuality and reality, the construction of truths and conspiracy theories.

Youada

Youada’s fuzzy paintings spotlight nostalgic symbols like Black Cat Detective and Sailor Moon: The Minnan region local talks doing graffiti in junior year and his childhood.

Enes Güc

Introducing a personal mythology built up by merging different realms and temporalities, Enes Güç recount the ideas and process behind their visionary images, reflecting on the complexities of human fears and desires within universal life experiences. For Coeval, Güç presents for the first time a new collaborative project: Tondal’s Vision. The Valley of The Exhausted And Perspiring.

Boya Wen

«Oscar Wilde once said, “Everything in human life is really about sex, except sex itself. Sex is about power.” As an unavoidable result of patriarchy, women constantly feel judged by their sexual partners, sex is considered as almost a special way to serve men and society, by becoming the carrier of children and a serviceable wife, instead of pure sensory enjoyment» - Boya Wen

Carlos Saez

Revealing about the ties of his hardware relics with environmental issues, the philosophy of extropy and human behaviours towards technological progress, Carlos Sáez open up about his shapeshifting practice and vision on the uncertainty of present times.