Joy of colours
Daylight entered through an oblique skylight; in the deliberately left white zones one can still see fine-grain paper texture and the shadow of the protective mesh on the window after summer repairs. Controlled splashes recall muffled laughter when a cup tipped — a rare moment of lightness, almost guilty, then liberating.
Second reading: the composition forms a stylised map of the quarter — blue at the centre like the Dnieper, oranges at the edge like Podil copper roofs at sunset. The work celebrates fragile joy returning after an alert, when one dares again to mix pigments instead of counting seconds on the stairs. Joy of colours: not naivety, but a collective decision to keep seeing the world in saturation.
Artist Stories
Associated Media
Top-down photograph of large collective watercolor on fine grain paper, overlapping vermilion cobalt mimosa-yellow sage-green washes forming abstract garden map, white zones showing paper texture, blue centre like river, orange edges like copper Podil roofs, paint cups and twelve palettes at frame edge, joy after air raid alert, Podil basement skylight shadow, saturated humanitarian hope.
Short handheld video, watercolor workshop table, vermillion cup tipping in slow motion, participants laughing softly, Ukrainian and French voices off-camera, paint-splattered table, collective joy, documentary art therapy Podil, warm indoor light, respectful intimate framing.
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