Unreal Art of Stacy D'Aguiar operates out of Studio #3 at 4434 30th St in University Heights, San Diego, a working fine-art studio within the Normal Heights 92116 corridor. D'Aguiar holds a BA in graphic design from Virginia Tech and has worked as a full-time painter since 2010, after apprenticing with Liz Jardine and transitioning from a corporate design career that included costume art for Marvel, action-figure illustration for Tech Deck, and design work alongside Clive Barker. The studio produces original surrealist and abstract paintings on metal, canvas, and wood using acrylic and oil in a layered transparency technique that reads differently under changing light — a process D'Aguiar calls Visual Dreamscapes. Collectors and corporate clients commission pieces for private residences and commercial lobbies, with completed installations at Sharp Rees-Stealy medical facilities and corporate offices in Irvine and Newport Beach, and the 30th St studio anchors a gallery row shared with Ashton Gallery at Art on 30th between University Heights and North Park. Exhibition history spans SCOPE Art Miami, Laguna Art Museum, Art San Diego, Art Santa Fe, and a juried entry in the San Diego Watercolor Society International Show in 2025, alongside publication in Beautiful Bizarre Magazine, PoetsArtists, California Homes Magazine, and Luxe Magazine. D'Aguiar also shows at Gallery 21 in Spanish Village Art Center in Balboa Park, connecting the 30th St studio to the park's established gallery district a short drive south. The studio is open for in-person viewing by appointment, and original paintings, prints, and commissions are available directly from the artist. Adams Avenue runs one block north, and the surrounding Normal Heights neighborhood's independent creative-sector energy draws artists and collectors to the area's gallery-walk culture — including the weekend crowd at Mystic Mocha on Adams. Each painting incorporates subliminal Sacred Geometry patterning and Reiki energy infusion as part of D'Aguiar's spiritual practice, layered beneath the surface of pernambuco-bright color palettes that move between insect, animal, and human subjects across canvases scaled for residential and institutional walls.