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Photo: Lukas Mykolaitis

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Photo: Lukas Mykolaitis

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Photo: Lukas Mykolaitis

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Photo: Lukas Mykolaitis

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Photo: Lukas Mykolaitis

Agata Orlovska b. 1998
Tik užsimerkus tave matysiu / Only When I Close My Eyes Can I See You, 2022
Mišri technika: tapyba, drobė, lakas, blykstė, judesio detektorius, elektronika
Mixed media: canvas, lacquer, flash, motion sensor, electronics
Mixed media: canvas, lacquer, flash, motion sensor, electronics
Dydis varijuoja
Dimensions vary
Dimensions vary
€ 3,350.00
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Agata Orlovska (b. 1998, Lithuania) is a painter, whose works approach the medium itself from a critical stance, breaking away from the rigidity of the painterly plain and spilling into...
Agata Orlovska (b. 1998, Lithuania) is a painter, whose works approach the medium itself from a critical stance, breaking away from the rigidity of the painterly plain and spilling into shapes of art objects, sound, and light installations. Orlovska obtained a MA degree in painting from the Vilnius Academy of Arts (2023), built on her BA studies in painting at the Academy (2021).
Multimedia works of Orlovska are imbued with layers of references to Western philosophy through ranging from the writings of Sørenas Kierkegaard, Jacques Derrida, and Umberto Eco, at the same time they obtain relevance only here and now in the moment when they are activated by the presence of the spectator. The viewer is placed at the centre of the inextricable search for the most direct way to capture and communicate the origins of art, amidst Orlovska’s dissatisfaction with the square of a canvas.
Multimedia works of Orlovska are imbued with layers of references to Western philosophy through ranging from the writings of Sørenas Kierkegaard, Jacques Derrida, and Umberto Eco, at the same time they obtain relevance only here and now in the moment when they are activated by the presence of the spectator. The viewer is placed at the centre of the inextricable search for the most direct way to capture and communicate the origins of art, amidst Orlovska’s dissatisfaction with the square of a canvas.