Inside Mike Winkelmann’s sprawling studio on Charleston’s industrial fringe, the digital artist known as Beeple is redefining what art can be—one surreal pixel, NFT, and kinetic experiment at a time
The Wayback Machine: A side gallery at Beeple Studios exhibits the early computers and now-antiquated technology that sparked Winkelmann’s graphic design journey. He’s known for his Everydays and royalty-free VJ loops.
In March, Beeple Studios hosted a collaboration with famed street artist and Charleston native Shepard Fairey, the latest of 18 community events since opening in 2023.
Perpetual Motion: Like the character in HUMAN ONE—the ever-marching, ever-morphing futuristic man in the kinetic sculpture and Beeple’s first sale at Christie’s in 2021—Winkelmann is constantly working and evolving.
Winkelmann grew up in the small town of North Fond du Lac, Wisconsin, with his younger brother, Scott. Though finger painting was a childhood activity, he says, “Art was not a thing in our household.... The closest art museum was in Milwaukee, but it played no part.” He took the pseudonym Beeple in 2003, after a stuffed animal that giggled and lit up as his “early work was a mix of sounds and light, like the toy.”
Winkelmann first went to school to become a video game designer but soon realized he preferred making “weird little art things.”
Today, Beeple Studios showcases his digital art in all its various forms. “This is a studio, not a business,” he says. “There’s no specific, quantifiable goal other than to continue making work that pushes forward the idea of what art can be.”
At Art Basel Miami Beach, Winkelmann’s Regular Animals captivated audiences and social media feeds. The robotic humanoids are now on display at Beeple Studios.
Beeple’s The Tree of Knowledge “continues to operate in real time, reflecting the ongoing churn of global information—sometimes calm, sometimes chaotic, and always alive,” as the studio description explains.
In the gallery space, Exponential Growth (sculpture at left) presents a 21st-century, tech-driven riff on traditional still life, exploring our fast-paced relationship with technological evolution.
The interactive Diffuse Control shifts according to artist, curator, and audience input, exploring mass collaboration between humans and AI.
Beeple Studios
In October 2025, Winkelmann and Danny McBride hosted the immersive “Synthetic Theatre” at Beeple Studios, “pushing the boundaries of what it means to cocreate with machines, offering an experience equal parts experimental lab and digital dreamscape,” according to the event promo.
“I’ve always been drawn to whatever medium feels the most uncharted,” Winkelmann says. His unbridled imagination, serious work ethic, and ability to constantly evolve “is what makes artists great,” says former Gibbes Museum of Art director Angela Mack.
From NFTs to kinetic installations, Charleston’s Mike Winkelmann is pushing the boundaries of digital art