With over 5 Million social media followers, Leah Schrager started making something akin to NFTs before there were NFTs. For over ten years, the artist has been making one-of-a-kind digital art that explores themes of celebrity and sexuality, merging the worlds of porn and art in a kind of ongoing online performance piece." – Hyperallergic, 2021
drops

Coming Soon: OnaGram
100 unique works using altered stock graphics over explicit base images from my private site, OnaGram.com. Art as censor bars. Randomized. Buyers receive the NFT, the unlocked base image, plus these perks.
The main platform [Schrager’s] work deconstructs is the art world and its accompanying rules of conduct." - Alexandra Genova, Time, 2017
Coming Soon: MyPeach
100 unique works using modified stock photos over a base image of my ass originally posted on my 4.6M IG to celebrate reaching 1M followers. Photo was part of my #toysonapeach series. Randomized. Buyers receive the NFT, the unlocked base image, plus these perks.
The artists’ ‘bodies appear as fantasies, mutations, glitches, nightmares, mundanities, dating profiles.’" - Johanna Fateman, ArtForum, 2015


Coming Soon: Man Hands
100 unique works using modified stock imagery over a base photo from my project, An American Dream (2009), in which I chronicled on Instagram my romantic experience with an anonymous producer/collector named Man Hands. Randomized. Buyers receive the NFT, the unlocked base image, plus these perks.
It’s safe to say it’s going to be harder and harder from here on out, in both the mainstream media and the contemporary art world, to dismiss, let alone ignore the artist who calls her base reality persona, Leah Schrager.” - Kurt McVey, WhiteHot Magazine, 2019
Coming Soon: Infinity Selfie
100 unique images. Using naked photos from my private site I create a kaleidoscope of desire that never fulfills itself yet is fulfilled in its search. Randomized. Buyers receive the NFT, the unlocked base image, plus these perks.
Schrager's work has been compared to artists like Marina Abramović, Cindy Sherman, and Laurel Nakadate, all of whom have used the exploration of their own images to make powerful statements.” - Kate Friedman, Glamour, 2017
