-
10 votes
-
Landscape with a nature says the Digital Curator
3 votes -
No Paint: Summer 2021
8 votes -
r/art subreddit under new management after an artist was banned for mentioning their art prints
On November 24, 2025, Artist Hayden Clay (reddit user Strawbear) was permanently banned from the r/art subreddit for mentioning their art prints. In addition, all their content-- many years'...
On November 24, 2025, Artist Hayden Clay (reddit user Strawbear) was permanently banned from the r/art subreddit for mentioning their art prints. In addition, all their content-- many years' worth-- was also removed from the subreddit.
r/art has always had extremely strict rules against self-promotion, to the extent of being actively hostile to artists. For example, if you post your art there, you are not allowed to have a link to your website in your reddit user profile, and you may not put a watermark which includes your social media handle. As of December 3, 2025, their official rules stated:
- DO NOT SPAM. No art sales, no links to social media, stores, or anything spammy.
DO NOT mention SALES or SOCIAL MEDIA. AT ALL.
DO NOT MENTION ART SALES. AT ALL.
DO NOT LINK TO SOCIAL MEDIA. Or talk about your social media, or include any watermark that references your social media.
DO NOT link to a sales site, or have a link to your sales site in your personal profile, or have a username that refers to a sales site.
Basically, if your Reddit account exists only to sell your art, DO NOT post here.
Broken record time: This applies to anything that looks like spam. ANYTHING. For example: product marketing, fundraising, charities, surveys, contests, collaborations, exhibitions, requests for submissions, research projects, business ideas, requests for prints, social media usernames, links to sales pages, website promotions, sneaky usernames, and whatever else we feel is spam.
If you still think, somehow, your spam doesn't fit this list, DO NOT post here.
Hayden Clay's post prompted plenty of backlash against the r/art mod team. On November 27, Hayden Clay tweeted that the r/art mod team rage-quit, leaving the subreddit locked. CORRECTION: Sorry for my mistake-- the mod team did not rage quit, it was one mod that removed everyone and then pretended like everyone decided to quit. Thanks to @teaearlgraycold and @CannibalisticApple for the correction!
On December 2, the r/art new mod team introduced themselves. They are promising to have updated "non-draconian" rules in the next few days. They understand that artists need to make a living and advertise their work, and want to moderate the subreddit in a way that balances that against spam. They've been unbanning users (including Hayden Clay) and they said that out of 5000+ bans issued in 2025, only 60+ had a valid reason.
UPDATE: As of December 4, r/art has been reopened, with updated rules in place. I think this is much more fair with regards to self-promotion:
- Advertising / Self-promotion
Promotion/advertising of products or services (e.g., art materials, software) is not permitted without mod approval.
Links to personal sites/socials/merch should be in your Reddit profile, and can be mentioned once in your post body and sparingly in comments if asked. Direct links to personal sites/socials/merch should only be shared in our weekly Wednesday megathread.
Promotion of OnlyFans or other pornographic sites is not permitted.
I remember being new to reddit and thinking about sharing my art in the r/art subreddit, but then I was turned off by their anti-artist rules. I'm pleasantly surprised by this turn of events-- though I wish it had happened earlier. The new mods sound reasonable, and have expressed dismay about the negativity of the previous mods:
Honestly it's pretty insane and a bit depressing seeing the modmails from the old team. Very rude, disrespectful, and extremely harsh to people making simple, innocent mistakes, older people or non-English speaking people misunderstanding little things, etc. Those mods were seriously troubled.
I'm glad that it looks like reddit's most established art subreddit has a better future ahead thanks to the new mods.
46 votes - DO NOT SPAM. No art sales, no links to social media, stores, or anything spammy.
-
Stochastic Planet - Every day a PHP script picks a random spot on Earth. The nearest photo to that spot is posted here. (2013-2018)
12 votes -
Brian Eno - A talk on generative music, artists, and culture
8 votes -
The dazzling aerial photos honored by the 2025 Siena awards offer "new ways of seeing familiar places," as one judge puts it
15 votes -
Amiga ASCII text art (2015)
6 votes -
The color of the future - A history of blue
8 votes -
Alt Text Study Club
9 votes -
Early computer art in the '50s and '60s
8 votes -
The robot sculptors of Italy
12 votes -
Can AI-generated photos be art?
24 votes -
PoetiCal: an experimental, collaborative publication only accessible through a calendar app
6 votes -
AI ‘street photography’ isn’t photography: What we lose by simulating experience
11 votes -
How did you do on the AI art Turing test?
22 votes -
AI artist says he’s losing money from people stealing his work
35 votes -
Icelandic fishing giant Samherji sues art student for spoofing corporate website – potentially chilling effect on artists engaging critically with large corporations
20 votes -
Why AI isn't going to make art
14 votes -
The Pentium as a Navajo weaving
18 votes -
Artist win: AI lawsuit advances
23 votes -
Photographer disqualified from AI image contest after winning with real photo
37 votes -
What ecelebrity did to my brain
6 votes -
JINZO Paint — vintage mobile drawing app
8 votes -
Stephen Fry reads Nick Cave's stirring letter about ChatGPT and human creativity
33 votes -
Meet Nightshade, the new tool allowing artists to ‘poison’ AI models with corrupted training data
56 votes -
Getty Images to debut its own AI image generator which will be trained on Getty’s own data
16 votes -
Drone Photo Award winners capture the extraordinary beauty of the ordinary
14 votes -
The AI art apocalypse
25 votes -
AI and image generation (Everything is a remix, part 4)
4 votes -
How DeviantArt is navigating the AI art minefield
10 votes -
Hilma af Klint's family criticises the NFT sale of the artist's sacred paintings – digital drop contradicts the artist's will and goes against her artistic intentions
6 votes -
Shutterstock will start selling AI-generated stock imagery with help from OpenAI
9 votes -
National Gallery of the Faroe Islands becomes the first national gallery to feature a fully produced show created by artificial intelligence
5 votes -
An AI-generated artwork won first place at a state fair fine arts competition, and artists are pissed
26 votes -
Why dark and light is complicated in photographs
5 votes -
The first standard to assure a photo’s authenticity has been created
7 votes -
Vienna museums starts OnlyFans account after its TikTok is banned for posting nudes
17 votes -
How racial bias in tech has developed the “New Jim Code”
6 votes -
nettime mailing list
4 votes -
IBM's dance notation typewriter
10 votes -
When tech makes food insecurity worse
5 votes -
These portraits were made by AI: None of these people exist
16 votes -
Patreon, Kickstarter and the new patrons of the arts
10 votes