I am a figurative painter whose work explores themes of family dynamics, motherhood, childhood, home, identity and the deeply human need to feel needed. As a mother of three and one of nine siblings, I have always been surrounded by children, which profoundly shapes my artistic perspective. In my paintings, time is fluid and timelines… Continue reading Viola Sparre
Author: Ad2026MiN
Simon Lezbedi
whatever is infinite doesn’t matter this is just a part of a lifetime of life in time the city is an abysmal bore the morning after woke up the morning before and went outside to start a day with a feeling that is no longer tied to the story every morning the hood pops and… Continue reading Simon Lezbedi
Sara Melin
Object permanence is a developmental phase which happens from around birth to 2 years of age. It is when a child understands that an object still exists even if they can’t observe it. The observer effect is a phrase within quantum mechanics that states that an object (in this case a photon or electron) has… Continue reading Sara Melin
Rebecca Beyene
– A gathering of tuna cans. – The domestic. – A meal. – Tuna cans mounted on spotlights, casting shadows and silhouettes on the wall. Resembling the reflection that comes from when water and light meet. As well as ripples that expand into the shadows. – Electro exciters that are stimulating bending waves through tuna… Continue reading Rebecca Beyene
Oliver Helmstadt
“Yesterday in a Year” consists of stories about a cat and a dog, and is situated within and made of a labyrinth. Here, narrative, architecture, and sound are used as a means of activation, to create intensity, asking the viewer what is felt in the combination of these elements, even if neither the stories nor… Continue reading Oliver Helmstadt
Martin Jurik
What struck me first – or rather second, right after an unholy sneeze caused by blooming poplar trees – was the light radiating from an overgrown corner next to the canteen entrance. The lady had no means of reflecting it. The cast aluminium surface oxidised by years of rain and something else yet pierced my… Continue reading Martin Jurik
Liv Melin
This character could kill the show Hi (scarf and silk gloves) I’m Monopoly I am ‘well’ put together ‘ONE performs annually the tragicomedy of the separation: the more people are isolated, the more they resemble each other, the more they resemble each other, the more they hate each other, the more they hate each other,… Continue reading Liv Melin
Kristina Malla
The world is in code. Pre-programmed. Encoded. De-coded. Don’t you see, everything is connected and the universe speaks in a strange language of signs, everywhere! When you start to see the patterns in the fabric of daily life, you can’t stop. Thick and thin black lines connect the tiniest mundane components to gigantic, complex systems.… Continue reading Kristina Malla
Dimitra Liogka
Dimitra Liogka (b.1997, Greece) explores how beauty and romance can evoke discomfort, investigating identity and the female body through imaginary figures and symbolic narratives drawn from dualities in nature, such as shells, hair, and organic forms, that appear both tender and unsettling. Working slowly and intuitively in oil painting, she creates intimate environments where desire,… Continue reading Dimitra Liogka
Arvid Staaf
Can you feel it? The dissonance is deafening. I try to make and live as open-endedly as possible. What I do is as inspired by archaeology and history as it is by my own life and thoughts. Underground culture has been and is an important part of my life and I try to work in… Continue reading Arvid Staaf