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The Art of Encounter
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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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Artwork Eugene Pokutnev - Subjektiv.art
Eugene Pokutnev - Subjektiv.art
Eugene Pokutnev
Ukraine
That night, I couldn’ sleep. Outside my window, the street lay in pitch-black silence, as if the world itself was holding its breath. In my mind, a scene played out like a film noir—the quiet raised a revolver, cocked it with an ironic smile, and fired a single shot into the sky. Smoke curled, lingering, twisting into shapes. Thoughts exploded in my head, each one a stream of colour racing toward an unseen finish line. They tangled, danced, and in that restless moment, these are the words Eugene said on his creative process. It was then that I understood something, Eugene Pokutnev’ paintings feel exactly like this. I first saw Eugene’ work in Berlin, without knowing his name. His paintings weren’ just compositions of colour - they were movements. They seemed to shift before my eyes, pulling me in, disorienting me in the best way. Later, I learned his secret: ‘-black’ a rare Japanese paint so dense that it absorbs nearly all light, creating an illusion of infinite depth. He orders it from a master in Japan, layering it alongside vibrant colour, bending space itself on the canvas. When you stand before his work, it’ as if you’ falling into the painting, moving between its layers, losing balance for just a second. His journey into art was as unexpected as the effect of his work. Growing up in Dnipro (coincidentally my home town), a career in art was never considered an option. He spent his days sketching intricate patterns but, like many others in his city, he needed stability. So he became a policeman. And yet, fate has its way of rewriting stories. One day, while investigating a burglary, his colleague casually showed the apartment owner some of Eugene’ sketches. The man, a businessman with an eye for art, was so captivated that he made an offer on the spot: “ the police. I’ fund you.” And just like that, Eugene left law enforcement behind.
Artwork Anna Kostritskaya - Subjektiv.art
Anna Kostritskaya - Subjektiv.art
Anna Kostritskaya
Ukraine
Anna Kostritskaya’s work carries an undeniable urgency, each brushstroke infused with a tension between fragility and defiance. Her art does more than depict; it preserves, resists, and remembers. Born in Ukraine, her creative journey has been deeply intertwined with the turbulence of her homeland. Since the full-scale war began, her work has taken on an even more urgent role, serving as a form of documentation, capturing emotions, losses, and the resilience of her people. Her paintings often feel like open wounds, yet within them lies tenderness, a refusal to let beauty be erased by destruction. Working across multiple mediums - painting, photography, and mixed media, Kostritskaya employs different artistic languages to express the unspeakable. In her portraits, faces emerge from the canvas like whispers, layered with texture, almost as if they are fighting to remain visible. There is a quiet intimacy in her work, a recognition of individual stories otherwise lost within the vastness of war. Much of her practice is rooted in the act of bearing witness. Her work explores displacement, identity, and the intersection of personal and collective history. Her photography, in particular, captures fleeting moments, glimpses of life that feel sacred in their ordinariness, a stark contrast to the overwhelming instability surrounding them. Her creative process is instinctual, driven by emotion rather than rigid intent. She has described it as work that decides its own path, rather than one that is meticulously planned. Yet, despite the weight of her subject matter, her art is about endurance. It embodies the human spirit’s refusal to be silenced. Beneath the layers of grief, there is strength. There is the unbreakable.
Artwork Liudmila Davydenko - Subjektiv.art
Liudmila Davydenko - Subjektiv.art
Liudmila Davydenko
Ukraine
Some artists speak through colours, others through form, but with Liudmila Davydenko, it’ something more - something beneath the surface, beneath even the layers of paint she so meticulously applies to her canvases. I first came across her work at an exhibition in Vienna, where her paintings, rich in texture and introspection, seemed to hold something unseen, something just out of reach. I knew then that I needed to understand her process, to see her world through her own eyes. Our visit to her studio in Lviv was planned after a long working session with my co-founders. It was a chance to engage directly with an artist whose work had left an impression on me. When we arrived, the setting was unexpectedly cinematic, her studio was nestled inside an old Soviet industrial building, its long, dimly lit corridors stretching endlessly like something out of Kubrick’ The Shining. There was a strange stillness in the air, a kind of suspended time, which somehow made the vibrancy of her paintings even more striking. Stepping into her workspace, I was immediately met with the scent of oil paint and the quiet discipline of an artist deeply immersed in her craft. Liudmila belongs to a generation of artists for whom patience and precision are second nature. Her early training as a sculptor is evident in the way she approaches her paintings - not as flat compositions, but as something three-dimensional, something that carries weight and substance. She doesn’ simply paint; she constructs. Every piece undergoes an intricate layering process, sometimes up to eight layers deep, giving the final work a sense of depth that feels almost geological, as if revealing different strata of meaning.
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