Hive, 2020

A hive is a skyscraper with tens of thousands of cells. The more cells it contains, the easier it is to raise numerous offspring, to hold lots of honey and pollen: the viscous nectar gathers, overflowing the edges of the nest.

Gathering disparate ideas, greedily absorbing the multitude of images that swirl by every day, absorbing all impressions, emotions and feelings - the artist creates new alliances on his way to find subsequent meanings.

A collection is a disparate multitude folding into something new and unified: shape, direction, and technique are not important here - only a multitude of cells that need to be filled and painstakingly assembled. The world of works of art appears to me in the form of a honeycomb. The very shape of the honeycomb reproduces a hexagon, a shape to which people like to attribute hidden meanings - a multitude of meanings, a multitude of cells.

The exhibition represents dynamic objects placed in a space, and a significant component of the work is the possibility of dialogue - a conversation between the works of art.