Searching For- Klara Devine In- Info
On SoundCloud, I found one account: @klara_dvn . It had three tracks uploaded between 2015–2016. Titles: "Glass Jaw," "Train to Wroclaw," and "Hollowbody." The music was lo-fi ambient with spoken-word German samples. Total plays: 412. Last login: 2017.
But I’ve saved the three songs. I’ve downloaded the archived portfolio. And I’ve left a small note on the dead subreddit: “If you’re out there, Klara—thank you for the art.” Searching for- Klara Devine in-
But nothing comes back.
That’s it. No names. No proof. Searching for Klara Devine stopped being about finding art and started being a case study in digital erasure . On SoundCloud, I found one account: @klara_dvn
Using the Wayback Machine, I found snapshots of the site from 2017. The portfolio was minimalist: twelve images of distorted figures in foggy, neon-lit landscapes. They were beautiful. Professional. But there was no bio, no contact email, and no last name mentioned elsewhere. Next, I checked music. A name like "Devine" often appears in goth, dream pop, or electronic scenes. Total plays: 412
The profile picture was a blurry photo of a train platform at night. No face. No comments from other users. The account follows nobody. The real clue came from a now-defunct subreddit: r/LostWave . A user four years ago asked: "Does anyone have a high-res version of Klara Devine's 'Winter Arcadia'? Her site went down."
For the past three weeks, I have been obsessed with searching for Klara Devine. This is the log of that digital deep dive—and what I learned about chasing ghosts in the machine. My journey began on a curation blog called Neon Dusk (shut down in 2019). An archived post praised a "stunning digital surrealist" named Klara Devine, specifically a piece titled "The Memory of Water." The link to her portfolio was a klara-devine.art domain.