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How are you doing in the quarantine? How do you spend your day?
I don’t feel a crucial difference. Before quarantine I was painting, reading, bringing my ideas to life while sitting at home as same as I do now. I don’t know how it works, but now it is even better. Seems like time has stopped and we should try to make the best out of this situation and keep doing our favorite things.

How did art enter your life?
The situation is pretty standard, I’m interested in art since childhood. My parents let me choose my future profession by myself and I enrolled in the university to the Faculty of Fine Arts. While studying I didn’t dare to make abstraction art seriously, because my teachers and other students considered making abstract art to be a bad way to show your professional skills in painting/drawing. I wasn’t bad at the academic art, but I have always been drawn to stylization or something non-standard. On my senior year we studied modern art of XIX – XX cent. more deeply. Hans Arp’s art became very special to me. The way he interpreted colors and shapes in his works is very appealing to me. I think, in some way, he is my mentor.

Hans Arp’s art became very special to me. The way he interpreted colors and shapes in his works is very appealing to me. I think, in some way, he is my mentor.

How would you describe your art?
The object means nothing to me. The main things that inspire me are: colors, shapes and their union. Figurative art implies portraying something alive. Something, that will eventually die, because that’s in its nature. So, my conception is about eternity of color shapes. I’m changing а figure or аn object to shapes and color them closely to original. The shapes have an absolutely abstract meaning and I usually find them in the photographic works of other artists. This is my way to support authors and show their ability to inspire someone. My works are created through the prism of minimalism and I’m trying to hold on to that philosophy in real life. Another way to describe my work is probably that I’m simplifying all the visual things because of bad eyesight since my childhood.

My works are created through the prism of minimalism and I’m trying to hold on to that philosophy in real life.

What are some of the issues you came across while doing your art?
I feel fascination and excitement when I’m making a digital version. If I’m deciding to paint something, it usually gives me less pleasure. It takes a lot of time to mix paint and to get the right shades. Often I tend to repaint paintings when something goes wrong. Therefore a canvas can be finished even after a few months.

How long does it usually take between the original idea and its realization on a canvas?
Not every digital version is meant to be “moved” on a canvas. I choose some references for the realization from my portfolio filled with pictures that have the closest aesthetics to the one I like. It’s important to have an opportunity to make a choice. With my thoroughness I’m painting slowly.

What are your hobbies and interests?
I love running and nature. So running outdoors, in the woods, surrounded by trees would be the best match. That’s what I really miss.

What do you know about Vienna?
I know that Austria has a rich cultural heritage and the government cares about it as much as about the contemporary art scene. Countless galleries, projects and artists of Vienna can prove it. And I respect it. Also Vienna is located not so far from Kyiv as it may have seemed and I studied German at school, so I’d love eagerly to visit you.

Yelyzaveta Vlasenko

The project focuses on creative, new, and versatile ways to communicate contemporary art and specializes in press, public relations, and social media communication for artists and galleries.

It was my last day in Milan, and I just wanted to take a short walk through the city. By chance, I wandered into a street where the PORTS 1961 fashion show had just taken place.

Something So Clear is Kapil Das‘ patient look behind the visual clichés and stereotypes that have come to define India. Consisting of a tight edit from thousands of photos taken over a decade.

The French painter Bertrand Fournier is 34 years old. He lives and works in Janville Sur Juine, a small village in the suburbs of Paris. He is married and is a father of three beautiful children.

Paul Gounon is a multidisciplinary artist born in 1989 in Aix-en-Provence. At the moment he lives and works in Paris. His work is at the crossroads of history and storytelling.

Based on years of experience as a photographer and an absolute Vienna lover I invite local people as well as visitors to explore hidden gems not far away from the place where they live.

Two Journeys is a project by The Golden Pixel ­Cooperative, conceived by Viktoria Schmid and Lisa Truttmann, in collaboration with Los Angeles-based filmmakers ­Rebecca Baron and Nora Sweeney.

Poolscapes brings together two connected bodies of work—“The Pool” (2002–05) and “Poolscapes” (2009–12)—focused on the motif of the swimming pool and realized over the course of ten years.

Searching Eva is the tale of a young woman growing up in the age of the internet, turning the search for oneself into a public spectacle, challenging you on what a woman „should be“.

Dear Friends. Girls* and Boys*, Non-binary or Gender Fluid, Trans Ladies and Gentlemens, Lesbians, Gays, Bisexuals and Straights, Subs and Doms, Tops and Bottoms, dear Family of Deviants.

Nic Caruccio has been painting all his life, but really started taking it seriously in college at Columbia College Chicago. After graduating, Nic started focusing on developing his own style and subject matter.

On the 13th of April – after three months of productive meetings and a lot of fun, we had a release party for our first issue, which started at the Improper Walls Gallery and continued at Mutzenbacher.

Shira Barzilay lives in Tel Aviv, Israel. She creates her art out of a deep and emotional spot with a cheerful disposition. In this exclusive interview, she told us more about her work and her daily routine.

Photographer Stephan Würth has taken his passion for the sport and transformed it into Tennis Fan, a collection of black and white photographs that he took on Kodak film over the past ten years.

Sojin Park was born and raised in Seoul, South Korea. As a kid, she always loved making something with her own hands. After graduating a design college in Korea, she studied fashion and art further.

In his first solo exhibition Benjamin Weber shows works which reflect different aspects and theories about time. His oeuvre touches physical themes as the chaos theory and relativity theory.

Sany Lerner has always been intrigued by how many colors can affect our visual space. The difference between the background and the simulations in the painting creates a different view of reality.

For the 58th International Art Exhibition – La Biennale di Venezia, the Lithuanian Pavilion transforms the interior of a historic quayside building within the Marina Militare complex into an lit beach.

Lost Paradise is the teaser for the eponymous art performance starring artist/activist Franzine Maria. The one-shot follows the stark contrast within the expressions of our narcism.

In the world of dogma you believe in perfect things. Consuming the ready ideas / cliches to get blind. But once your eyes notice it, you are no longer blind. Now you see something.