Liquid Canvas Puts Music Fan Art on TV Screens

A new app turns television sets into rotating galleries for fan-created and curated music visuals, offering an alternative to static posters and default screensavers.

Fan art has long been a physical object—pinned to walls, traded at shows, saved on hard drives. Liquid Canvas moves that impulse onto the largest screen in the room, turning a television into a customizable, rotating display for music-related visual work.

The platform-agnostic app works across major TV brands and draws from a library of over 6,500 artworks, including animated pieces and NFT-backed images. Two curated series anchor the experience. One, Mega Fan Art, builds visual tributes around arena-sized acts like Queen, Led Zeppelin, and Metallica, pulling from stage imagery, album iconography, and cultural references. The other, Black Paint on Linen, strips the portrait down to stark minimalism, featuring digital renderings of figures like Bob Marley, David Bowie, and John Coltrane.

Users can also upload their own fan photos, videos, or work created with familiar design tools and generative AI platforms. A playlist feature ties the visuals to a user’s own soundtrack, though the core draw is the visual backdrop—a living gallery that updates according to the owner’s taste rather than a streaming service’s algorithm.

The app occupies a narrow but open niche. It doesn’t stream music or sell art. It simply gives the television a second job as a slow-moving canvas for fandom, filling the space between playback and idle screen with something more personal than stock photography.

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ROMBO Editorial Staff

ROMBO Editorial Staff

The collective voice behind ROMBO Magazine’s news, reviews, features, and cultural coverage.