Jeremy Mann fell in love with abstraction early on, before obtaining the fine art degrees that would allow him to throw himself into the work with the unshackled obsession of a self-made artist and the technical prowess of an art school alum, all in service of a fearless vision.
Exclusive interview with Augustina "LUNARIA" Miknevičiūtė to learn about her success in the Beautiful Bizarre Art Prize 2025.
The French illustrator Morgane Magloire who has worked for authors, publishing houses, and the role-playing game company Wizards of the Coast. The young artist works digitally but is no stranger to oil paint.
Read our exclusive interview with Jennifer Allnutt, 3rd Prize Winner of the RAYMAR Painting Award in the 2025 Beautiful Bizarre Art Prize.
2026 Beautiful Bizarre Art Prize is now accepting entries! Ready to level up your creative career? This is your moment to shine! Showcase your work on a global scale and win big with $76,000 in cash and prizes up for grabs. Don't miss out, enter now!
A photographer, visual alchemist, and consummate storyteller, Lillian Liu has long inhabited the borderlands between fantasy and critique — where silk meets steel, where beauty confronts expectation, and where archetypes are not just reimagined but rebelliously reclaimed.
Did you know that many Beautiful Bizarre Art Prize finalists have also enjoyed a boost to their careers? We share some of the 2025 finalists' stories.
Exclusive Interview With Lin Gökshin, 3rd Prize Winner of the Digital Art Award, 2025 Beautiful Bizarre Art Prize
An exclusive interview with Vini Naso,1st Prize Winner of the Digital Art Award, 2025 Beautiful Bizarre Art Prize to discuss his winning piece 'Hajime'.
Read our exclusive interview with Nicole Sánchez Ilzenhöfer, the People's Choice Award Winner in the 2025 Beautiful Bizarre Art Prize.
Glass artist and designer Jessica Murtagh is painfully familiar with the literal and metaphorical cubicle spaces of office life. But she won’t be boxed in.
A pencil-wielding wizard exploring the intricate depths of interiority, Summer Aldis has always had a penchant for elevating limitations into art. Growing up in Australia without means to equip her wandering imagination with a boxload of expressive tools, she worked with pencil and paper, and arguably “an unhealthy amount of stubbornness”, as she gradually developed from a self-taught artist to an award-winning champion of the humble graphite.











