READ THE CURRENT ISSUE
Spring 2026: Contemporary Intimacies — The Sacred, the Tender, and the Everyday
ISSUE FEATURES
ARTISTS

On the Cover:
Romy
Elliott
I think as an artist, if you paint something you are familiar with and know deeply, a subject that makes you feel something powerful, it will lead to more authentic work. Authenticity is key. When I’m around animals, I light up in a way that nothing else quite awakens.
Spring issue
INDUSTRY

Akshaya Parthasarathy
My paintings start with a single, compelling shape such as the sharp angle of a limb, a specific shadow on a wall, or the way a rug cuts across a floor.
Spring issue
ARTISTS TO WATCH
TRENDING NEWS

Artist to Watch:
Louis Accard

Artist Feature:
Christian Dalla

Artist Feature:
Hugo Wunder-Lind
As a transitional moment between Medieval sacred art and the Renaissance, they combine a sense of the sacred with a certain strangeness in composition and figuration, while remaining highly precise in their treatment of textures, scale, and portraiture.
The painter’s task, is to slow down time. Observing the same subject for hours or days invites constant stillness, and that mechanism continues throughout the entire day. When that machine of observation, that is, being attentive to what surrounds me, keeps working, I can access better sensations, filtering out visual noise.
So the idea here is culture-landscape. As if the land dictates certain aspects of a culture. A bedrock dictates what the soil is like, therefore what plants can grow and which animals eat those plants dictates how the landscape is shaped and historically which humans have come there. I think about nomadic peoples following certain animals to landscapes
Paris
Buenos Aires
United Kingdom
INTERNATIONAL ARTICLES | Previous Issue

Purchase the
Spring 2026 Issue
Modern Renaissance Magazine
A premiere international arts magazine
Issue length: 90 pages in heavyweight glossy stock
As a 501(c)(3) nonprofit, your purchase of this issue benefits our upcoming exhibition featuring college artists, giving them free submissions, a sales platform, and the credit they need to launch their work. Thank you for supporting our work in arts advocacy.
In an era defined by acceleration, overstimulation, and fragmentation, the artists gathered in this issue turn inward, toward quiet gestures, familiar spaces, and deeply observed encounters. Their practices resist spectacle in favor of attentiveness. Through painting, they reclaim slowness as a form of inquiry, transforming the ordinary into something emotionally resonant, psychologically charged, and at times quietly transcendent.
Across these conversations, a shared sensibility emerges: the belief that meaning is not found in grand narratives, but in the subtle textures of lived experience. A shadow cast across a room, the intimacy between a figure and an animal, the lingering atmosphere of solitude, the persistence of sacred visual language within contemporary life; these become sites of reflection through which the artists navigate memory, vulnerability, perception, and presence.
For Christian Dalla, painting becomes a way of “slowing down time,” filtering visual noise through sensation and contemplation. Romy Elliott approaches tenderness and companionship with striking emotional clarity, distilling the psychological bond between humans and animals into gestures of warmth and quiet familiarity. Akshaya Parthasarathy transforms domestic spaces into layered psychological terrains, balancing chaos and structure through richly atmospheric compositions rooted in observation and introspection. Meanwhile, Louis Accard reactivates the visual grammar of Quattrocento painting, confronting the tension between sacred representation and contemporary civic life with both precision and ambiguity.
See hundreds of art pieces from 25+ artists across nine countries and learn about the latest art trends, styles, and genres in contemporary art you'll need to know to advance your career!




















