via Instagram/@grimesMusicNewsMusic / NewsSee inside Grimes’ new colouring book, ‘Miss Information’The book features Miss Anthropocene illustrations and an AI-generated poemShareLink copied ✔️November 27, 2020November 27, 2020TextThom Waite In May 2020, Grimes debuted her first fine art show, selling “a fraction of her soul” alongside notebook drawings and anime-inspired digital prints, some of which featured her digital avatar, WarNymph. Now though, everyone can get their hands on some of her art in the form of a colouring book. Titled “Miss Information”, Grimes’ first colouring book was officially released earlier this week (November 24) and features 16 original digital drawings by the musician-slash-artist. The book also includes a poem generated by AI. Despite acknowledging the existential threat of artificial intelligence, Grimes also debuted a relaxing, AI-driven lullaby back in October, inspired by X Æ A-XII and the “aimless crap” that babies usually have to listen to. “The form of the colouring book is necessarily incomplete,” explains a statement on the book, adding that it’s up to fans to complete it. The statement also draws parallels with another collective project from earlier this year: namely, Grimes invited fans to create visuals for “You’ll Miss Me When I’m Not Around”, publicly posting green screen assets and audio stems for the Miss Anthropocene track. You can view more details about the “Miss Information” colouring book here, and take a peek inside by swiping through Grimes’ Instagram post below. Expand your creative community and connect with 15,000 creatives from around the world.READ MORE11 alt Christmas anthems for the miserable and brokenhearted Last Days: The opera exploring the myth of Kurt CobainLenovo & IntelInternet artist Osean is all for blending art and technologyHow hip-hop is shaping the fight for Taiwan’s futureNew York indie band Boyish: ‘Fuck the TERFs and fuck Elon Musk’The 5 best Travis Scott tracks... according to his mumTheodora answers the dA-Zed quizDHLSigrid’s guide to NorwayThe 30 best K-pop tracks of 2025‘UK Ug’: How Gen Z Brits reinvented rap in 2025 How a century-old Danish brand became pop culture’s favourite sound systemDHLInside singer Sigrid’s intimate walks through nature with her fans