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Pete Gamlen Draws a Standoff from Above

Forced perspective turns a failed protest into a commanding composition for The New Yorker
You’re above everyone. Below, tactical officers mill about in helmets and camouflage vests. Gamlen positions us forty feet up in a tree and from there the entire operation shrinks to the scale of a board game.
Pete Ryan Catches Grandma Pumping Iron on the Playground

An older woman doing a one-armed handstand on a jungle gym gives this New Scientist cover story about frailty a burst of optimistic joy.
A sunset settles over a playground. Kids hang from the bars, vibing. Above them, an older woman balances inverted on one arm, limbs flung wide. New Scientist’s March 2026 cover story argues that our assumptions about aging and physical decline are upside down. Pete Ryan’s illustration put that thesis on top of a jungle gym and made us laugh.
Tania Yakunova’s Social Sampler for 5280 Magazine

Yakunova packs a city’s worth of social activities into one image for 5280’s guide to Denver’s best gathering spots
How do you illustrate a list? 5280’s feature on Denver’s 36 best “third places” poses the problem at scale. Tania Yakunova’s answer is in the structure of the composition. She builds a grid, then lifts one woman out of it entirely, positioning her as a guide threading us from vignette to vignette.
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Min Heo’s Wired Kingdom for The New Yorker

For a film review about transferring consciousness into robot animals, Heo ditches Pixar’s CG polish and draws every creature like it might vibrate off the page
Heo’s composition splits along a fallen log that works as a species boundary. A pink wire loops out of a beaver’s consciousness-transfer helmet and spirals across the entire image before disappearing into a hollow log, where a wide-eyed girl peers out. It’s the technology that drives “Hoppers” rendered as a visual device holding together an image that wants to fly apart.

The Fortune Teller’s Tip
Thick outlines and hot colors give this Economist illustration a conspiratorial energy

Nate Sweitzer Paints Lucinda Williams For Rolling Stone
A double-exposure portrait folds a Southern main street into the singer-songwriter’s silhouette for her 16th album about dark days.
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