Critique
YoungBoy Never Broke Again – “Finest”: A Raw Conflict Between Pain, Faith, and Survival
YoungBoy Never Broke Again – “Finest”: A Raw Conflict Between Pain, Faith, and Survival When YoungBoy Never Broke Again dropped “Finest” on May 23, 2025, fans and critics alike took notice of something different — something more intimate, introspective, and emotionally candid than the typical trap anthem. Released as a promotional single from his album MASA, this track stands as one of YoungBoy’s most powerful statements in years, blending street reality with spiritual urgency.
By Nivard Anna18 days ago in Art
Tee Grizzley – “Robbery 9”: A Gritty Tale of Loyalty, Betrayal, and Street Reality . AI-Generated.
Tee Grizzley – “Robbery 9”: A Gritty Tale of Loyalty, Betrayal, and Street Reality When Tee Grizzley drops a new chapter in his “Robbery” series, listeners know they’re about to hear something cinematic, raw, and unfiltered — and “Robbery 9” is no exception. Released on May 16, 2025 as part of his project Forever My Moment, the track blends gripping storytelling with emotional intensity and hard-hitting rap energy.
By Nivard Anna18 days ago in Art
Graffiti is not a crime.
I love grafiti. It is a form of art, and it is also a language of the streets. It is in no way, size, shape or form a crime of any kind. The streets is the canvas and the museum with which the artists who create graffiti can put their work. One of my favourite things to do is to take photos of the graffiti that i see and i have put them all in a collection on instagram named after the classic Prince album and movie "Graffiti Bridge". Graffiti is art and it is an insult to the artists when it is covered and destroyed.
By Revista Miko:XCI 22 days ago in Art
The Gates by Christo and Jean Claude
Many years ago in Central Park in New York City there was a beautiful installation by artistic duo Christo and Jean Claude called "The Gates". It was set up along the entire walking path in Central Park and lasted a good long time to the point that it over stayed its welcome in the opinion of some but not mine but after a while some New Yorkers had formed the opinion. The piece was orange frames with safron curtains like those that Buddhist monks wear draped over them. I wish that I had had the chance to experience but I missed out. I just want to say that the staff who approved the project for the park are geniuses.
By Revista Miko:XCI 22 days ago in Art
I saw the Imagine Peace Tower
I was in awe of it, and I showed it to my mother; that peace was something beautiful to see. I saw a little bit of it, and I was still inspired, and I still remember it to this day. Besides, you don't see something beautiful like that every day. You're doing a wonderful job creating this beautiful imaginary Tower of Peace. Later, I had a poster of the tower in my room.
By Revista Miko:XCI 22 days ago in Art
Dj Frizbee an illustration that I had done in highschool and when I was doing
Dj Frizbee is an illustration I did of a Dj I call Frizbee. I created DJ Frizbee when I was in highschool and this was around the time that I was doing tags around the school. Reina was an another graffiti piece that I did and a tagging name that I was trying on along with tags I was also creating pieces of my own as I had shown with this article.
By Revista Miko:XCI 22 days ago in Art
When Images Refuse Ownership
The history of modern art repeatedly demonstrates a stubborn truth: no image can ever be owned absolutely. Forms circulate, poses migrate, gestures recur, and meanings survive only insofar as they continue to work on people. Copyright, originality, and authorship may function as legal or institutional devices, but aesthetically they are always provisional. What ultimately matters is not where an image comes from, but whether it generates a lived response — a mood, a tension, a sense of story. Few contemporary paintings illustrate this more clearly than The Singing Butler (1992) by Jack Vettriano, a work that has become both one of the most reproduced images in Britain and one of the most contested.
By Peter Ayolov24 days ago in Art
Pakistan deploys helicopters, drones to end standoff with Baloch rebels. AI-Generated.
Pakistan Deploys Helicopters, Drones to End Standoff With Baloch Rebels Pakistan’s security forces have intensified operations in Balochistan by deploying helicopters and surveillance drones to break a prolonged standoff with Baloch rebel groups, underscoring the growing complexity of internal security challenges in the country’s largest and most volatile province. The move reflects Islamabad’s determination to restore control while balancing military pressure with political and social sensitivities in a region long marked by unrest.
By Sain Hafiz24 days ago in Art
When health insurance costs more than the mortgage. AI-Generated.
For millions of households, the monthly mortgage payment has long been considered the single biggest expense. Yet an uncomfortable shift is underway: in many families, health insurance premiums now rival—or even exceed—the cost of owning a home. This phenomenon is reshaping personal finances, altering career decisions, and raising urgent questions about the sustainability of modern healthcare systems.
By Sain Hafiz26 days ago in Art
Australian Woman Dies After Becoming Snagged in Ski Lift in Japan. AI-Generated.
A tragic accident in Japan has claimed the life of an Australian woman who became snagged in a ski lift, prompting renewed discussions about safety standards at winter sports resorts. Authorities confirmed the incident occurred at a major ski resort, where the victim was reportedly attempting to disembark from the lift when the accident happened.
By Aarif Lashari26 days ago in Art










