March 2026 Illustration Forecast
From AI anxiety to the search for belonging — what February’s commissions reveal about where illustration is heading
A single anxiety pulses through nearly every commissioned illustration we reviewed this past month. What does it mean to be a person inside a system that keeps asking whether it needs you?
In February, Paul Blow gave the broligarchy a portrait built from its own reading list for Colossus Magazine. Adrià Voltà dissolved figures into a luminous data grid for the WSJ. Mia Oberländer brought Expressionist energy to Bloomberg’s voice-mode revolution. Different stylistic approaches all circling the same question.
The anxiety extends beyond AI into deeper questions of belonging. Dadu Shin’s monochromatic crowd for Wired, illustrating the search for birth parents, was the month’s most devastating single image.
Gracia Lam’s outstretched hands for Real Simple answered that search — illustrating the importance of belonging. As a counter-balance, Sol Cotti’s sun-drenched solo traveler for NPR’s Life Kit looked at planning a solo trip. One about being seen, the other about not needing to be.
Two months in and a pattern is clear. Illustration in 2026 is responding to a political and technological upheaval by documenting it. And the hands making these images are still human.
Belonging will become a central subject. As prompting continues pushing people apart, illustrators will push back with warmth. Expect more commissions around community, caregiving, and relationships.
The most interesting illustrations of 2026 will not be made by AI. But they will almost certainly be about AI, or about what it feels like to live alongside it.
We’re excited to see how March unfolds and hope you join us as we explore new published illustrations every day.