Born in Saint Petersburg, Russia, 1984
Live and work in Paris, France
My practice unfolds where memory meets transformation and the everyday. I work with Ready-Made — things that once held a life of their own, shaped by use, routine, and intimacy. By dismantling and reassembling them, I let them return in altered forms, suspended between function and poetry.
This act of deconstruction is never purely material. It carries fragments of emotions and memories, intertwined with responses to the world around me. In transformation, the familiar slips into strangeness; the ordinary reveals its hidden poetry; irony exposes the tensions woven into daily life.
The domestic sphere plays a central role in this process. When the objects of the home lose their usual stability — when they fracture, shift, or fall apart — the fragility of “home” itself becomes visible. In my work, they carry this instability, turning the search for balance into an artistic gesture.
Ultimately, my work seeks to reveal the hidden poetics of the everyday — a space where intimacy and irony coexist, where remnants of function turn into vessels of memory, and where personal history resonates with broader cultural echoes.