The Art Bog is an independent art and culture publication devoted to art history, travel, photography, architecture, design, and visual culture. At its heart, The Art Bog is a place of discovery.
Some articles focus on artists, museums, artistic movements, and individual works of art. Others begin with the love lives of artists, mythical creatures, forgotten buildings, unusual objects, or simple questions that lead somewhere unexpected. Art history remains the foundation, but curiosity often determines the route.
The site is meant to be explored as much as searched. A reader looking for one artist may leave with five more names to investigate.
The highest compliment is simple: a reader discovers an artist, place, or idea they had never encountered before and leaves wanting to learn more.
Some visitors arrive looking for a specific artist. Others find themselves wandering from one article to another, uncovering painters, places, objects, and stories they never expected to find. The most rewarding discoveries often happen that way.
The Art Bog welcomes both the curious newcomer and the dedicated enthusiast. Whether you have spent years studying art or simply know what you like, your perspective belongs in the conversation. Expertise is respected here, but curiosity is valued just as highly.
Art can be studied endlessly, but it can also be enjoyed immediately. The Art Bog makes room for both. The site is written with the belief that learning about art should feel less like completing an assignment and more like following an interesting conversation wherever it leads.
Alongside well-known masters, readers will find overlooked painters, regional traditions, lesser-known museums, historic cities, architectural treasures, and subjects that deserve a closer look. Rather than focusing exclusively on artists and artworks, The Art Bog often explores the unexpected relationships between art, history, travel, architecture, design, and everyday life.
If there is a common thread running through The Art Bog, it is the belief that interesting questions rarely stay confined to a single category. One discovery often leads naturally to another.
About the Founder
Behind The Art Bog is Bogdan Migulski—artist, designer, photographer, and also the man who in 2003 became the Founder and Editor of The Art Bog.
Bogdan holds a Bachelor of Fine Arts degree from Kean University and continued his studies at the School of Visual Arts in New York City, where The Art Bog began as the final project for a web design course. Based in the New York metropolitan area, he has spent more than two decades working professionally in design while continuing to explore the subjects that first inspired the site.
His career has included work connected to publishing, travel, retail, luxury, branding, and commercial real estate. Early experience in travel publishing introduced him to destinations, cultures, and stories from around the world, while later work connected to retail-focused commercial real estate fostered a deeper appreciation for architecture, cities, placemaking, and the ways people interact with the built environment.
His perspective has also been shaped by extensive travel. Over the years, his explorations have taken him to nearly a quarter of the world’s countries in search of museums, architecture, historic cities, cultural landmarks, landscapes, and creative inspiration. These journeys have included destinations throughout North America, Europe, Latin America, the Caribbean, the Middle East, and neighboring regions.
Bogdan’s interests range from prehistoric art and Rococo interiors to typography, Art Nouveau, landscape painting, photography, and the overlooked artists and stories that often sit just outside the spotlight. Whether exploring the brick cities of the Netherlands and Flanders, the museums of Europe, the historic landscapes of Egypt, or the dramatic scenery of Switzerland’s Lauterbrunnen Valley, he is continually drawn to subjects that reward closer attention.
Although The Art Bog reflects the interests and experiences of its founder, it is not intended as a personal blog. Instead, it serves as a place where curiosity leads the way—part exploration, part reference library, and part curiosity shop.
Success is measured one discovery at a time: a painter a reader never knew existed, a museum they decide to visit, a place they add to a future journey, or a subject that sends them down an unexpected path.
If readers leave with a longer list of artists, places, museums, and ideas than they arrived with, then The Art Bog has done its job. If they discover an artist they have never heard of and suddenly want to know everything about them, even better.
Founded in September 2003 on West 21st Street in New York City.
FAQs
What is The Art Bog??
The Art Bog is an independent art and culture publication devoted to art history, travel, photography, architecture, design, and visual culture. It is a place for discovery, exploration, and the unexpected connections that link seemingly unrelated subjects together.
Why is it called The Art Bog?
The name combines a passion for art with the founder’s nickname, “Bog.” Over time, the name also came to represent a fantasy place where readers can wander, explore, and occasionally lose themselves among artists, ideas, places, and stories.
Do you only write about paintings?
No. Paintings may be the heart of the site, but many articles begin somewhere else entirely. A historic building, a mythological creature, an old photograph, a museum, a city, a work of decorative art, or a simple question can all become a doorway into art history.
Why do so many articles focus on artists I have never heard of?
Because discovering a new favorite artist is one of the great pleasures of art. The world does not need another thousand articles about the same handful of names. Sometimes the most rewarding discoveries are waiting just outside the spotlight.
What is your favorite kind of discovery?
Finding an artist I have never heard of and immediately wanting to see more. Some of the most memorable artists are not the most famous ones. Discovering an overlooked painter, illustrator, photographer, architect, or craftsperson and realizing they deserve a wider audience is one of the most rewarding parts of running the site.
What makes an artist interesting enough to write about?
There is no formula. Technical skill matters. Beauty matters. Historical importance matters. Sometimes an artist is included simply because their work creates a strong reaction or stays in the mind long after it has been seen.
Is The Art Bog trying to tell me what I should like?
No. The goal is not to prescribe taste. Readers are free to agree, disagree, or develop their own opinions. Art becomes more interesting when people bring their own perspectives to it. The Art Bog does not even like some of the artists that are featured!
Do you have to agree with an artist to appreciate their work?
No. Great art can come from people with different backgrounds, beliefs, personalities, and life experiences. Understanding an artist and admiring an artist are not always the same thing.
Do I need an art background to enjoy the site?
Not at all. The Art Bog welcomes both the curious newcomer and the dedicated enthusiast. Whether you have spent years studying art or simply know what you like, you are welcome here.
Why are travel, architecture, history, and other subjects mixed in with art?
Because art rarely exists in isolation. Artists lived in cities, traveled through landscapes, worked inside buildings, fell in love, formed friendships, and responded to the world around them. Following those connections often leads to a deeper understanding of both art and history.
Why do some articles focus on unusual topics?
Interesting subjects are often hiding in plain sight. Sometimes a forgotten painter tells a larger story than a famous one. Sometimes a building, a city, a piece of jewelry, a mythical creature, or an unexpected question opens the door to something much larger.
How do you choose what to write about?
Some subjects are chosen because they are historically important. Others are chosen because they are beautiful, fascinating, overlooked, or simply raise interesting questions. Historical significance matters, but curiosity often plays an equally important role.
What is the best way to explore the site?
Follow your curiosity. Start with an artist, a place, a building, a museum, or a subject that interests you and see where it leads. The site is meant to be explored as much as searched.
What made The Art Bog a success?
Readers discovering an artist they have never heard of, travelers adding a museum to a future trip, people looking more closely at a building while taking a stroll, students becoming more curious about a period of history, or people simply beginning to learn more. That is how The Art Bog has succeeded.
How can I support The Art Bog?
Enjoy the articles, share the ones you like, and tell others about the artists, places, and ideas you discover. Every new discovery helps keep the conversation going. So invite your friends and family to follow you into The Art Bog the next time you feel like wandering into The Art Bog.