Scream Vision @scream_vision @screamvision (farcaster) @scream.vision (Instagram)
In a space where trends shift daily and visuals come and go, Scream.Vision has carved out something that sticks. Behind the name is Artem, a 28-year-old illustrator whose work fuses meme culture with street aesthetics, cinematic tension, and an obsessive eye for detail. Since entering the NFT world in 2021, he’s been building a universe where characters wear gold chains, carry heat, and never look out of place — whether it’s on a blockchain or a mixtape cover. There’s a hidden rhythm to his art: a Pepe face engraved on a jacket button, a glint in the eyes of a background character, or a gun tucked under designer fabric. His style is dense, narrative, and unmistakably his. Projects like "Seeds from the memetic garden" showcase that signature fusion — gritty, stylized, and full of subtle storytelling. Along the way, Artem has contributed to major NFT collaborations, including work on CryptoBatz by Ozzy Osbourne, and multiple other projects throughout the 2021–2022 NFT boom. His characters always carry weight — not just visually, but culturally. Outside of illustration, Artem collaborates with his wife Kate "Hibari" on stop-motion clay animations — surreal and tactile miniature worlds built frame by frame. It’s another outlet for the same thing that drives all his work: worldbuilding with attitude. Before NFTs, Artem worked full-time designing album covers for musicians, creating visuals for names like Waka Flocka Flame, Crash Rarri, Skilla Baby, B.o.B, and Sada Baby. That raw, audio-visual energy still fuels everything he touches. Scream.Vision doesn’t follow the hype — he builds mythologies.
Most of my time went into cookin’ up comic-styled pieces that present the mfers as characters from a grimy 90s-flavored city — Mfer City — where memes ain’t just livin’, they survivin’.