
TMFA Community, one of the world’s largest and fastest-growing internet based art communities, is pleased to announce the exhibition of over 48 artists from 20 countries at Easton Broad, located at 237 NE Broadway in Portland, Oregon.
You may know TMFA Community from their attention grabbing projects like the Monoliths that mysteriously appeared all over the world last year, or when the Hollywood sign was altered to read Hollyweed. They also have created some of the world’s most selfie friendly spectacles like the Pink House and Private Jet Experience. They have worked on dozens of projects with world-class brands like Ford and Gucci, and celebrities like Miley Cyrus, Selena Gomez, and Ariana Grande.
The exhibition will be open to the public for free from 5 to 10pm on September 31 and October 1st. The exhibition’s artworks include 55 paintings, sculptures, performances, and over 130 digital artworks projected into a virtual gallery constructed in the metaverse specially designed for this exhibition.
Members of The Most Famous Artist (TMFA) Community—including the group’s renowned founder Matty Mo aka The Most Famous Artist— will show artworks of all mediums. Additionally, a VR gallery is being constructed to allow for the members who could not travel to Portland to participate in viewing the exhibition.
With a current member base of over 500 artists, TMFA is quickly becoming one of the strongest forces in culture independent of the insular art market.

Max Ruebensal
Max Ruebensal is a young, contemporary artist using various mediums to reflect on symbolism, identity, pop culture & the ever-growing digitalization of our everyday lives. He therefore combines an experimental and process-oriented art practice with a conceptual, thematic approach that is inspired by urban culture, the collection of thoughts and the cultivation of our worldviews. Visually and aesthetically, his works are characterized by a bold, vibrant and expressive style that effortlessly moves along the intersections between abstraction and figuration. Sometimes kept abstract, other times combined with traditional painting, the results are works that are both personal and universal in their language.