art
Art that’s as dark as it is evocative; discover horror-inspired artwork, from twisted mutations of classic paintings, chilling sculptures, spooky photography and more.
The Curse of the Basano Vase: Death in Silver
A Gift of Beauty. A Price in Blood. It looks like nothing more than a piece of art. A silver vase, hammered to perfection by a craftsman long turned to dust. Gleaming curves catching the soft glow of candlelight, as if cradling secrets in its polished skin. A treasure for any collector. But those who have touched it would tell you the truth... if they were still alive.
By Veil of Shadows7 months ago in Horror
“The Old Man and the Red Balloon”
On the edge of a quiet town, where time seemed to move a little slower, lived an old man named Henry. He was the kind of man who had lived many lives in one—once a soldier, later a baker, then a widower, and now just Henry, the quiet figure in a brown overcoat who walked every morning to the park with a cane and a sigh.
By Afzal khan dotani (story uplode time 10:00 PM)7 months ago in Horror
Top 10 Webcam Horror Movies. AI-Generated.
Webcam horror movies have gained popularity in recent years, utilizing the unique format of digital communication to create suspense and terror. These films often explore themes of surveillance, identity, and the dark side of technology.
By Ninfa Galeano7 months ago in Horror
The Silent Agony: A Portrait of Resistance and Loss
In a world overrun by noise—of war, of politics, of relentless chatter on digital screens—sometimes, a photograph tells the story louder than a thousand voices. The image before us is one such visual parable. It speaks in muted tones, in earth-stained fabric and blood-drenched wool. The woman depicted does not scream, does not reach out, does not protest. Yet everything about her—the closed eyes, the tension in her brow, the soft lines of her face frozen in fatigue or final rest—screams volumes.
By Fazal Malik7 months ago in Horror
Names of Honor and the Tragedy in Balochistan
Balochistan’s Names of Honor and a Recent Tragedy Balochistan, a region rich in tradition and steeped in tribal values, has long upheld a cultural system that places honor—ghairat—at the core of personal and social identity. Within this code, the concept of “name” (naal) or honor (izzat) often determines an individual's reputation, familial pride, and community standing. However, the weight of this honor can, and often does, lead to tragic consequences.
By Fazal Malik7 months ago in Horror
Whispers in Room 313
The House With No Past It started with a Craigslist ad. Three-bedroom Victorian, dirt cheap, barely an hour outside Portland. No neighbors for a mile. The photos were grainy, but I saw the charm under the grime. I needed quiet. I needed space. I needed to disappear for a while.
By Isabella Wood7 months ago in Horror
Why Found Footage Horror Still Terrifies Me—Even in 2025
The Shaky Cam That Started It All Picture this: it’s 1999, and I’m a teenager sneaking into a dimly lit theater with my friends, clutching a bucket of popcorn, heart already racing. The screen flickers, and The Blair Witch Project begins—not with polished Hollywood visuals but with grainy, shaky footage of three college students bickering in a car. The camera wobbles, the audio crackles, and I’m hooked. Why? Because it feels real. That raw, unpolished glimpse into their doomed hike through the Maryland woods didn’t just scare me—it lodged itself in my psyche. Even now, in 2025, with VR headsets and AI-generated scares, found footage horror still makes my skin crawl. Why does this lo-fi genre, born from cheap camcorders and clever marketing, still hold such power?
By Ozjan Kackar7 months ago in Horror










