Do you remember art class?
Pikazo.
Tables speckled with the bright drops of yellow, red, and blue paint that never made it to a student’s canvas. The faint smell of clay from misshapen forms left to dry on a shelf, waiting for the kiln. The feel of charcoal between finger and thumb, strangely warm and imprecise.
Maybe you’re a professional artist now and you’re adding neural style transfer to a toolkit alongside brushes and turpentine. Or maybe the charcoal seemed to disobey you intentionally, you swore the paint preferred the table, and your sculpture was mistaken for discarded clay and never made it to the kiln. And maybe, ever since that art class, you’ve believed that art was something other people did - special, privileged people who could take anything in the world and magically make it art.
We believe that art is a universal birthright, and we created Pikazo to help you claim it. Pikazo doesn’t care if you’re Bob Ross or can’t even doodle. Unlike oils or acrylics, the neural algorithms it uses obey an accountant or athlete as precisely as a master painter. Pikazo in hand, the world is now yours. Make it art.
Maybe you’re a professional artist now and you’re adding neural style transfer to a toolkit alongside brushes and turpentine. Or maybe the charcoal seemed to disobey you intentionally, you swore the paint preferred the table, and your sculpture was mistaken for discarded clay and never made it to the kiln. And maybe, ever since that art class, you’ve believed that art was something other people did - special, privileged people who could take anything in the world and magically make it art.
We believe that art is a universal birthright, and we created Pikazo to help you claim it. Pikazo doesn’t care if you’re Bob Ross or can’t even doodle. Unlike oils or acrylics, the neural algorithms it uses obey an accountant or athlete as precisely as a master painter. Pikazo in hand, the world is now yours. Make it art.

Try the app now.
As a Pikazo artist, you are cordially invited to exhibit your work in the exclusive Salon, a Facebook group where like-minded creatives praise and critique each other’s art while, we assume, sipping espresso and wearing black.