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Rymma Vinogradova
Artist from Switzerland
Rymma Vinogradova is a Ukrainian contemporary artist working in the
style of figurative art, based in Basel, Switzerland. She was born in 1998 in
Ukraine, where she spent 21 years of her life.
In 2013 graduated from the Art School named after Raisa Kyrychenko in
her hometown Poltava. Since her youth, Rymma has been discovering
Ukrainian culture in its various manifestations. This gave her a sense of
taste and aesthetics as she feels and sees it now.
Her main question is: is there a place for ethnicity in our "virtual" reality? In
Rymma's reality there is. She delves even deeper into the study of
ancestral traditions, folk art, peculiarities of history and passes it to others.
Because these things are very fragile. "If we don't recreate it in our
memory now, who will pass it on to future generations?" − is the question
that prompts Rymma to tell incessantly about the importance of saving
and rethinking of cultural heritage through her artwork.
Art for her is a path and the way to be heard.

Tell what you feel...
What do you see in this artwork?
Nettle
Painting by Rymma Vinogradova
150 x 120 cm • Canvas, Acrylic
Location:
Basel, Switzerland
About women who, despite the pain, tear nettles with their bare hands, about their strength, desperation and vulnerability.
Location:
Basel, Switzerland
About the artist
Rymma Vinogradova
Artist from Switzerland
Rymma Vinogradova is a Ukrainian contemporary artist working in the
style of figurative art, based in Basel, Switzerland. She was born in 1998 in
Ukraine, where she spent 21 years of her life.
In 2013 graduated from the Art School named after Raisa Kyrychenko in
her hometown Poltava. Since her youth, Rymma has been discovering
Ukrainian culture in its various manifestations. This gave her a sense of
taste and aesthetics as she feels and sees it now.
Her main question is: is there a place for ethnicity in our "virtual" reality? In
Rymma's reality there is. She delves even deeper into the study of
ancestral traditions, folk art, peculiarities of history and passes it to others.
Because these things are very fragile. "If we don't recreate it in our
memory now, who will pass it on to future generations?" − is the question
that prompts Rymma to tell incessantly about the importance of saving
and rethinking of cultural heritage through her artwork.
Art for her is a path and the way to be heard.

Tell what you think...
What do you see in this artwork?








