Artistic Unsettling free prompts and swap face images

314 text to image prompts for artistic unsettling are available. Compatible with MidJourney, Dall-E and Stable Diffusion

Best prompts for artistic unsettling

bewildered photographer trips and looks in terror as he drops all the film reels on the floor, the film reels falls slice by slice, tragedy, intricate, elegant, highly detailed, lighting, painting, artstation, smooth, illustration, art by Caravaggio, Frida Kahlo
highly detailed and textured painting of a deformed anatomical face portrait with octopus and anemones, emotionally expressive, highly detailed oil painting, soft light, psychedelic color palette, cinematic composition, cinematic lighting, sharp focus, masterpiece by simon stalenhag, chie yoshii, casey weldon, martine johanna, tim walker, ernst haeckel, john william godward
an oldman in chair, lots of complex stuff around, intricate in the background, art, wide shot, 12mm lens, painting, detailed, cartoon, cinematic shot, fantasy, low saturation, vignette, hdr, [deformed, bad anatomy, disfigured, poorly drawn face, mutation, mutated, extra limb, ugly, disgusting, poorly drawn hands, missing limb, floating limbs, disconnected limbs, malformed hands, blurry, (mutated hands and fingers)++++, watermark, watermarked, oversaturated, censored, distorted hands, amputation, missing hands, obese, doubled face, double hands, flowers, roses]
David Lynch style psychological horror featuring disturbed artist, set in a dimly lit gallery, with harsh shadows
visionary artist surrounded by a world in transformation, reflecting the feeling that everything is changing around us in ways that are hard to comprehend. The visionary artist appears caught in a battle against themselves, unable to escape their inner conflict. The composition includes visual representations of splintered canvases, distorted visions, melting landscapes to symbolize the impact of our own actions on our world. The scene conveys a sense of melancholy and introspection, capturing the idea that each time we fail to understand ourselves and others, we contribute to the slow destruction of our world.