Artistic Insights Blog: Exhibitions, Events, Magazines
& Social Media
Search by Artist | Book | Issue …
THIERRY CARRIER
Thierry Carrier has built a deeply introspective body of work, defined by silence and an emotional tension that is difficult to fully name. His paintings place the viewer before solitary figures, suspended within bare landscapes, where gesture, gaze, and posture seem to contain a story that is never completely revealed.
MANUEL MARTÍ MORENO
Manuel Martí Moreno, born in Valencia in 1979, has developed a sculptural language where matter, emptiness, structure, and existential reflection converge with remarkable intensity. His work stands out for its ability to transform strong, resistant materials into forms that appear light, fragile, and almost suspended in time.
MEGAN ELIZABETH READ
Megan (Mae) Elizabeth Read is an American figurative artist based in Charlottesville, Virginia. Largely self-taught, she began her artistic practice working in charcoal and pencil before transitioning to oil painting, which now serves as her primary medium. Her work ranges from intimate still lifes to large-scale figurative paintings, with a particular focus on the female form.
New Artists New Era
This section is dedicated to showcasing emerging talent in the contemporary art scene. It highlights their training, body of work, and vision for the future of art, aiming to give visibility to new artists and reflect the latest trends in the art world.
Interview with Lisa Rickard
Lisa Rickard’s artistic practice is rooted in Imaginative Realism, a language in which the human figure becomes a symbolic vessel for expressing invisible realities. Her paintings often begin with abstract ideas developed through graphite drawing, before evolving into luminous compositions where light appears to move, breathe, and dance across the human form. Born in Philadelphia, Rickard discovered her fascination with the allegorical figure during her teenage years, when she began drawing regularly from a live nude model who was also a ballet dancer. This early experience shaped her sensitivity to movement, gesture, and the expressive potential of the body.
Editorial – Issue 89
Throughout the history of painting, wings have been far more than a simple aesthetic or narrative device. They are a persistent metaphor, a symbol that moves across cultures, periods, and styles, carrying meanings that range from the divine to the profoundly human. To speak of wings in art is, in essence, to speak of freedom: that constant longing, at times luminous and at others painful, to transcend the limits that define us.
Sculpture Covers Vault
Discover a curated archive of the most iconic and influential sculpture covers. This collection features artists such as Candice Angelini, Irina Shark, and Angela Mia De la Vega, highlighting expressive forms, contemporary aesthetics, and diverse approaches within today’s sculptural art. Designed to inspire and engage, this selection offers a focused insight into the visual language and emotional depth of contemporary sculpture.
Interview with Ignacio Chávez
Ignacio de Jesús Chávez stands as one of the most solid and distinctive figures in contemporary Mexican painting. His career, marked by decades of international exhibitions in Mexico, Italy, Portugal, Spain, Germany, Ecuador, and the United States, reflects a path built on technical rigor, conceptual research, and a profound understanding of visual language.
Hiroshi Hayakawa
Originally from Japan and currently based in the United States, Hiroshi Hayakawa is a multidisciplinary artist whose work spans a wide range of media and techniques. His practice includes drawing, painting, kinetic sculpture, alternative photography, and paper-based works, forming a constantly evolving visual universe.
Editorial – Issue 87
Why this editorial is special to us. This editorial comes from a very different place than usual. It is not driven solely by professional reflection or the desire to share ideas, but by a profound change in our lives that has reshaped the way we understand work, projects, and the future. In recent months, we have received news that has completely changed our course: the arrival of a new life that will make us parents for the first time. An experience that is already teaching us, even before its arrival, that there are priorities that go beyond any professional goal, and that true success is not always measured by results, but by the meaning we give to each step.
Interview with Ioanna Stefou
Ioanna Stefou is an architect and painter currently based in Athens, Greece. Fascinated by painting from a very young age, she gradually developed a deep passion for realism and for the expressive power of the human figure. After working as an architect for more than a decade, painting became her primary focus, especially after 2014, when she attended a course at the New York Academy of Art.
Editorial – A Season of Renewal
In this issue, we are especially pleased to present new talent defined by freshness, elegance, and, above all, delicacy. We believe art reveals itself most powerfully when it is allowed to exist in its perfect moment, when its presence feels both immediate and lasting. It is through that sensitivity that we are able to appreciate the new visual languages, refined approaches, and emerging perspectives that continue to shape both the professional and emerging spheres of figurative art. Over the years, our community has brought together outstanding figurative artists whose work reflects a remarkable range of expression and technical ability, from deeply sensitive portraits to sculptures of extraordinary naturalism and presence. Each new edition becomes, for us, another opportunity to continue that dialogue between mastery, discovery, and artistic evolution.
International Figurative Drawing
The Guide Artists is proud to present a selection of outstanding figurative artists from around the world. Figurative art plays a vital role in documenting both individual and cultural narratives, offering insight into the human condition across time and place. From everyday life to complex emotional and social realities, figurative practice communicates through a universal visual language, reflecting the experiences, values, and challenges that define us.
New Artists New Era
This section is dedicated to showcasing emerging talent in the contemporary art scene. It highlights their training, body of work, and vision for the future of art, aiming to give visibility to new artists and reflect the latest trends in the art world.
DANIELLE JON
Daniela Ion (b. 1996, Huesca, Spain), known professionally as Danielle Jon, develops a practice grounded in figurative drawing, where graphite on cotton paper becomes a vehicle for psychological and symbolic inquiry. Based in Zaragoza, her work explores identity, vulnerability, and the internal tensions of the body, approached as an emotional terrain in constant transformation.
Interview with Raúl Campos
Raúl Campos Herrera (Querétaro, 1992) is a Mexican figurative painter whose work has steadily established itself as one of the most compelling voices within contemporary realism in Latin America. Rooted in a rigorous academic foundation, his practice is centered on the human figure as a primary vehicle for narrative and introspection, allowing him to investigate themes such as the human condition, psychological tension, and collective memory.
The Art of Landscape
In this section of The Guide Artists Magazine, we explore landscape as both subject and concept—highlighting contemporary interpretations alongside reimagined classical perspectives. Each feature reveals a distinct way of engaging with the natural environment, transforming terrain, atmosphere, and silence into intentional artistic composition.
Editorial – Issue 86
We have entered the fourth month of the year, and with the arrival of spring, we step into a new chapter for our magazine with an issue defined by renewal, intention, and a forward-looking vision. This moment represents more than a seasonal shift; it marks the beginning of a new stage shaped by clarity, evolution, and a deeper commitment to excellence.
Interview with Halee Roth
Halee Roth is a contemporary painter whose work explores the human figure as a bridge between emotion and introspection. Working from her studio surrounded by nature, she blends the influence of German Expressionism with a deep sensitivity to color, light, and the human experience. Trained at Utah State University and shaped by her time in Germany and India, her practice balances classical technique with a contemporary expressive language marked by intimacy, vulnerability, and emotional strength.
New Artists New Era
This section is dedicated to showcasing emerging talent in the contemporary art scene. It highlights their training, body of work, and vision for the future of art, aiming to give visibility to new artists and reflect the latest trends in the art world.
