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Myroslava Perevalska
Artist from Ukraine
Some artists paint what they see. Others paint what they dream. Myroslava Perevalska paints what she feels, and, more importantly, what she fears losing. In a world rushing forward, she is an artist who asks us to slow down, to breathe, to see before the colours fade, before the emotions slip away, before time moves beyond our grasp.
When we spoke, she described her connection to art in a way I had never heard before. “ think of myself as a fish,” she told me. “ fish that doesn’ question the water, that doesn’ think about how deep it swims. It just exists.” Art is her element, her lifeblood, and her way of understanding the world. It’ why, even as war reshapes the reality around her, she continues to create, not just as a form of resistance but as a way to document the truth as she experiences it.
Her paintings are immediately recognisable, figures emerging from bold, urgent strokes of red, white, and black. Red, she told me, is the colour of life, of passion, of survival. It pulses through her work, a constant heartbeat. But it is also the colour she fears losing. “ greatest happiness,” she said, referencing Borges, “ when a blind man dreams of red.” The idea of losing that sensation, of not being able to feel the depth of colour, is her deepest fear. But instead of running from it, she embraces it, pours it into her canvases, ensuring that even if time erodes memory, the intensity of her vision remains.
As we talked, her thoughts spiralled outward - philosophy, history, technology, even the fate of humanity. “ are all on the Titanic,” she told me. “ comfortable but unaware of what’ coming.” The world is changing too quickly. Wars, pandemics, artificial intelligence, isolation. She fears we are forgetting how to truly be present. That people are becoming less human. She sees this loss reflected in modern art, how simple narratives and raw emotion are disappearing, replaced by a detachment from the soul of creation.

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Care
Painting by Myroslava Perevalska
140 x 110 cm • Ink, Canvas, Oil
Location:
Kyiv, Ukraine
Care. In other words, it is love without pathos, it is a manifestation of humanity. This is the imperceptible work we do every day, it is the path of our heart through our whole life. This is something that does not require a reward or thanks, we do it at the call of the heart. In this artwork, I wanted to convey the emotional state of old people, their love is similar to the feelings of a mother and a child, where there is an subtle connection, complete trust. The man bent down to adjust the pillow of his beloved, but he is not sure whether she is still here or her soul has already moved into the bird sitting nearby...
Location:
Kyiv, Ukraine
About the artist
Myroslava Perevalska
Artist from Ukraine
Some artists paint what they see. Others paint what they dream. Myroslava Perevalska paints what she feels, and, more importantly, what she fears losing. In a world rushing forward, she is an artist who asks us to slow down, to breathe, to see before the colours fade, before the emotions slip away, before time moves beyond our grasp.
When we spoke, she described her connection to art in a way I had never heard before. “ think of myself as a fish,” she told me. “ fish that doesn’ question the water, that doesn’ think about how deep it swims. It just exists.” Art is her element, her lifeblood, and her way of understanding the world. It’ why, even as war reshapes the reality around her, she continues to create, not just as a form of resistance but as a way to document the truth as she experiences it.
Her paintings are immediately recognisable, figures emerging from bold, urgent strokes of red, white, and black. Red, she told me, is the colour of life, of passion, of survival. It pulses through her work, a constant heartbeat. But it is also the colour she fears losing. “ greatest happiness,” she said, referencing Borges, “ when a blind man dreams of red.” The idea of losing that sensation, of not being able to feel the depth of colour, is her deepest fear. But instead of running from it, she embraces it, pours it into her canvases, ensuring that even if time erodes memory, the intensity of her vision remains.
As we talked, her thoughts spiralled outward - philosophy, history, technology, even the fate of humanity. “ are all on the Titanic,” she told me. “ comfortable but unaware of what’ coming.” The world is changing too quickly. Wars, pandemics, artificial intelligence, isolation. She fears we are forgetting how to truly be present. That people are becoming less human. She sees this loss reflected in modern art, how simple narratives and raw emotion are disappearing, replaced by a detachment from the soul of creation.

How does this artwork make you feel?
Contribute your perspective to the community & earn rewards. Leave your reflection below.
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