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The Art of Encounter
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Art That Resonates With Your Emotions
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Art That Resonates With Your Emotions
Find art that mirrors your emotions and values through our innovative mood-matching feature. Whether you’re feeling hopeful, introspective, or bold, we’ve got art that connects deeply with you.
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Making of CAD 180116
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Dans mon atelier, où je peins au sol. La touche finale (et désolé pour le son 😅)
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Processus de création dans mon atelier!
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Painting process
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Art process. The painting is done with acrylic paints on canvas.
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Few shots and fragments from working process.
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Making of Dreamscape #4
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My studio. Working process. I am painting a still life with aloe.
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The process of making a mosaic
Reflections Hub
Discover what others felt—and share your own moments of connection, emotion, and meaning through art.
La chute Pierre Freneau - Subjektiv.art
Stare at the artwork for 20 seconds. What comes to mind?
I feel how powerful one single tool can be—symbolized by a metal chain—capable of toppling pillars that have long been established throughout history. These pillars, though once strong, now show signs of weakness, fragmented and each standing with its own perspective. The young blood, represented by the hand, holds the potential to create something new—sometimes even dismantling the old pillars, but always with respect.
Danylo Pavenko
Almost freedom Eugene Pokutnev - Subjektiv.art
How do you feel when you look at this artwork?
An endless weaving of forms, a search for images and evidence... perhaps it’s just mine, or our confusion is breaking free
Rost Borsch
With flower Liliya Nebera - Subjektiv.art
What do you see in this artwork?
Cold empty space, a fragile barely noticeable chair that it seems is about to disappear, depriving her of her only point of support... she is focused and collected, as if she has stopped breathing and held her heart in order to return balance, peace and acceptance to her gaze... In some parallel dimension, she has already turned into a flower sprouting roots in nothingness, in order to blossom again and incarnate inspite of the ethereal reality, incarnate with new strength and new hope... this time... as always.
Rost Borsch
Mentality Sestry Feldman - Subjektiv.art
What do you see in this artwork?
This artwork immediately brings memories about my childhood in Dnipro, Eastern Ukraine. I remember the men in sporty adidas leggings and without shirts (гопнікі), speaking weirdly in heavy jargon. They were the antipodes of the old ladies sitting on the benches, complaining and broadcasting Soviet narratives. The interiors of flats with “eurodesign”, the tacky exteriors of banners and ads — results of the chaos of unregulated trade — those were visual symbols of my childhood. And this artwork creates a perfect memory. It accepts fully the absurdity and chaos that I was born into but instead of dramatising it makes fun of it. It makes me smile. It is a sweat ironic reminder of where I am from without making any predictions about where I am heading to.
Kateryna Serdiuk
Still life with peonies Artem Andreichuk - Subjektiv.art
Stare at the artwork for 20 seconds. What comes to mind?
Incredible composition! It is somehow so dynamic and perfectly balanced. A pure joy to look at!
Yehor Serdiuk
Arbres Muriel Evangelista - Subjektiv.art
Were you transported somewhere by this artwork?
What is your opinion on what contemporary art should be...more for intelectual interpretations... or more sensitively towards our emocional !?
Mario Miranda
Green Light Olena Ryzhykh - Subjektiv.art
Whose work did this artwork remind you of?
Love the natural earthy colours. Reminds me of a lizard emerging from its cave at dusk
Maximilian Kaessens
Blue woman (from the series Line) Nataliia  Brichuk - Subjektiv.art
Stare at the artwork for 20 seconds. What comes to mind?
Evokes both vulnerability and strength at the same time
Maximilian Kaessens
"Waiting for..." Bohdan Burenko - Subjektiv.art
Whose work did this artwork remind you of?
This artwork looks bold! Like how the rough lines and strong colors lead to serious mood
Vlad Soloviov
Kyiv Skyline Series. Light Through The Darkness Ganna Kryvolap - Subjektiv.art
Stare at the artwork for 20 seconds. What comes to mind?
It may be Kyiv but this version could be pictured by Murakami.
Manuel Medeiros
Clockwork #12 Socia Socia - Subjektiv.art
How do you feel when you look at this artwork?
I see death and cigarettes. Maybe cotton as well, a dangerous combination. But just abstract enough to know they'd belong in a Lynch film altogether
Manuel Medeiros
Covered Danya Shulipa - Subjektiv.art
Whose work did this artwork remind you of?
I want to be him. Anyone can silence the world out there by taking a bath and covering his own face, but doing so in style? Only for the selected few. Which I why I can only assume that yellow barrier is an extra layer of distance, ensuring all the noise, negativity of the outside world stay right there, outside. What a guy.
Manuel Medeiros
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Meet our Artists
Artwork Oleksiy Belusenko - Subjektiv.art
Oleksiy Belusenko - Subjektiv.art
Oleksiy Belusenko
Ukraine
In the quiet, contemplative spaces of Oleksiy Belusenko’s paintings, time feels like it has softened, lingering between memory and the present. Born in Kazakhstan in 1960 and moving to Ukraine as a child, Belusenko has spent a lifetime weaving together history, landscape, and emotion — both as an artist and as a restorer of the past. For 25 years, he worked at the National Scientific Research Restoration Centre in Kyiv, (specialising in polychrome wooden sculpture and decorative carving), breathing life back into centuries-old sculptures and carvings. This intimate relationship with history shaped his artistic eye — his brushstrokes carrying the patience of a restorer, his compositions steeped in reverence for what came before. His works feel like whispers of the past, filtered through a deeply personal lens. While Belusenko’s career spans painting, sculpture, and curation, it is his landscapes that carry his most intimate dialogue with the world. Capturing the quiet poetry of Ukrainian nature, his canvases are imbued with a sense of nostalgia—soft brushwork, muted yet resonant tones, and an ever-present balance between warmth and coolness. His work does not impose itself; rather, it invites you in, allowing you to drift between reality and impression, between what is seen and what is felt. Beyond his artistic practice, Belusenko has also dedicated himself to art education, sharing his knowledge through the BritArt XX lecture series, where he dissects the nuances of 20th-century British art. As a curator and a founding member of the Blue October creative association, he continues to shape and support the contemporary art scene in Ukraine. Today, his works reside in private collections and museums across 30 countries. Yet, despite this global reach, his paintings remain rooted in something deeply personal — his connection to place, to time, and to the quiet beauty of everyday moments.
Artwork Artem Andreichuk - Subjektiv.art
Artem Andreichuk - Subjektiv.art
Artem Andreichuk
Ukraine
Tucked away in his studio, a space bursting with pigments and canvases in mid-creation, Artem Andreichuk welcomes visitors with the same vibrant energy that radiates from his work. The walls pulse with colour: lush, unapologetic, and raw. Here, the naked human form is not just a subject but a manifesto. Stripped of status, regalia, or pretence, his figures exist in perfect equilibrium with nature, unashamed, inviting, free. Artem’ journey as an artist is deeply tied to this pursuit of authenticity. Born in 1983, he has remained in Ukraine, shaping his artistic voice amid the ever-changing landscape of his homeland. His fascination with the human body is more than aesthetic—it’ philosophical. In a world layered with masks, he paints what remains when all is shed. Sensual yet unembellished, his figures embody a radical honesty, one that refuses to be confined. Yet, Andreichuk is not just about the body; he’ about the thrill of expression. On another wall, his minimalist works stand in stark contrast to the sensuality of his figurative pieces - youthful, witty, and exuding a rebellious charm. Layers of electrifying colours seem to wink at the viewer, as if daring them to embrace the absurdity and joy of existence. “ should be fun,” he says with a knowing smile, and his art ensures that it is. Beyond the canvas, Artem's creative spirit has always stretched into multiple realms. Music has been a lifelong companion, and as a former bassist for the indie band Blake Maloka, he has translated rhythm into brushstrokes, movement into stillness. His paintings, much like a well-played bass-line, carry an energy that hums beneath the surface; sometimes wild, sometimes restrained, but always present. To step into Artem Andreichuk’ world is to be reminded of life’ fundamental pleasures: skin meeting sun, laughter ringing through colour, rebellion found in joy. His work doesn’ just ask to be seen, it demands to be felt.
Artwork Nataliia  Brichuk - Subjektiv.art
Nataliia  Brichuk - Subjektiv.art
Nataliia Brichuk
Ukraine
Natasha Brichuk, known as Notuko, paints in the language of memory. Raised in Rivne, Ukraine, she grew up surrounded by the vivid patterns of embroidered tablecloths, the warmth of painted ceramics, and the quiet grandeur of old Ukrainian architecture. These objects weren’t just decoration—they were stories, passed down through generations, whispering of heritage, resilience, and identity. But tradition, as she saw it, was not static. It pulsed with life, adapting, shifting, existing between past and present. It is this in-between space that Notuko inhabits as an artist. She pursued decorative and applied arts, specialising in ceramics, but painting became her true medium for storytelling. What began as a simple fascination evolved into a bold artistic language - where folk motifs meet abstraction, where Byzantine echoes intertwine with modern fluidity. Her figures emerge as symbols rather than individuals, their forms at times dissolving into textured layers of colour, as if caught between reality and memory. Improvisation is at the heart of her process. She embraces instinct, letting her brushwork capture fleeting emotions and intangible histories. Her compositions often feel like fragments of a grander, unseen whole — inviting viewers to reconnect with traditions, not as relics, but as living, breathing experiences. Notuko’s works have traveled far beyond her hometown, exhibited across Ukraine, Europe, and the UK. Yet, her essence remains rooted in the stories of home — the unspoken ties between past generations and those still to come. Her art is a conversation between centuries, a delicate balance of structure and spontaneity, of inherited symbols and contemporary expression. To experience Notuko’s work is to step into a world where tradition doesn’t belong to the past—it evolves, just like us.
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