Geistė Kinčinaitytė Lithuanian, b. 1991
Self-Portrait I, 2012
Silver gelatin prints, Ilford fibre-based paper, framed
60 x 70 cm
23 1/2 x 27 1/2 in
23 1/2 x 27 1/2 in
Edition of 5 plus 2 AP
Further images
Geistė Marija Kinčinaitytė (b. 1991, Lithuania) is an artist and researcher whose work spans video art, photography, and installations, engaging with media archaeology and the eerie. Her practice navigates the...
Geistė Marija Kinčinaitytė (b. 1991, Lithuania) is an artist and researcher whose work spans video art, photography, and installations, engaging with media archaeology and the eerie. Her practice navigates the unsettling spaces between human perception and environments, revealing the discomfort of stepping outside familiar zones—whether self, habitat, or habit—while remaining alert to unknown presences. She holds a PhD in Film and Screen Studies from the University of Cambridge.
Kinčinaitytė's works have been exhibited widely in solo and group exhibitions across Europe and Asia. Her notable exhibitions include *The Photographers’ Gallery* and 253 Hoxton in the UK, Kaunas Photography Gallery and MO Museum in Lithuania, *Fotogalleriet* in Norway, as well as the National Taiwan Museum of Fine Arts and the *Inside-Out Art Museum* in China. In 2018, she created a video installation for *Boiler Room x Tinder* events in Bristol, Glasgow, and London, further showcasing her ability to merge art with contemporary culture.
Her works provoke reflection on humanity's place within its environment, marked by her distinctive, almost alien anthropological gaze that seeks to capture the eerie and the unknown.
Kinčinaitytė's works have been exhibited widely in solo and group exhibitions across Europe and Asia. Her notable exhibitions include *The Photographers’ Gallery* and 253 Hoxton in the UK, Kaunas Photography Gallery and MO Museum in Lithuania, *Fotogalleriet* in Norway, as well as the National Taiwan Museum of Fine Arts and the *Inside-Out Art Museum* in China. In 2018, she created a video installation for *Boiler Room x Tinder* events in Bristol, Glasgow, and London, further showcasing her ability to merge art with contemporary culture.
Her works provoke reflection on humanity's place within its environment, marked by her distinctive, almost alien anthropological gaze that seeks to capture the eerie and the unknown.