The exhibition is built around images that "fall from the ceiling"—literally. At the center are strange figures and scenes that emerge from the patterns on the ceiling, looking somewhere between a dream and imagination.
These works are not about the past. They are about warmth that hasn’t disappeared. About a city that has become a memory but hasn’t stopped being home.
This series is about a life we can no longer return to, because we have grown up—with all the games we invented and the people around me. I painted a part of it, but there’s still so much more I would love to share with people—those fragments of Mykolaiv that filled my (our) life with energy.
The display features a series of works created in the style of naïve art — filled with bright colors, playful shapes, emotional honesty, and a feeling of nostalgia for something that never actually happened, but feels like it could have.
This exhibition is like a dream that comes to someone it wasn’t meant for. Grotesque, naive, absurd, and softly surreal—born from a subconscious that never asked to be understood.
«Underwater World» is an exhibition about creatures that live very deep—maybe under water, maybe inside something or someone.
The project explores the intersection between the instinct to survive in the forest and human reactions to fear and danger. Here, the "forest" serves as a metaphor for the human mind.
You go about your day, and then, all of a sudden, you see them out of the corner of your eye. You see them in everyday objects, you see them in the people closest to you, and you see them under your bed. You might even see them in your own reflection. They appear when you least expect them and when you’re most vulnerable. You see them in your sleep.