Gallery
This object interprets the plot of the oriental fairy tale One Thousand and One Nights as a tense story about survival, power and imagination. Scheherazade here becomes the creator's archetype and the stories she follows are not just entertainment. Each unfinished fairy tale becomes another night experienced, a death postponed, another opportunity to speak.
The space of the object resembles a stage or a closed memory box. The fairy tale titles written on improvised pillows act as a fragmentary archive of stories. As signs of cultural memory preserving life through words. And the heads of previous concubines laid out in the bottom drawer introduce a creepy, grotesque subtext. The decorative, almost toy-like aesthetic contrasts with hidden violence and existential tension.
M. Jonutis subtly combines the stylistics of the folk primitive, irony and surrealist narrative. The work speaks of the fragility of women in a patriarchal system of power, but also of the ability of creativity, language, and imagination to resist destruction.
The fairy tale here becomes not a fantasy, but a form of survival.
Maybe our thoughts also have orbits?
The painting "combines" mythology, the human body and cosmic energy into one hypnotic vision.
Maybe our thoughts really have orbits too?
The painting "combines" mythology, the human body and cosmic energy into one hypnotic vision...
Do our thoughts have orbits?
The painting "combines" mythology, the human body, and cosmic energy into one hypnotic vision.
What if our thoughts also have orbits?
The painting "combines" mythology, the human body, and cosmic energy into one hypnotic vision...
The human face here becomes not a portrait, but a transparent field through which a swarm of bees moves. As if thoughts, memories or cosmic particles.
A person is perceived as a fragile, constantly changing body, permeated with invisible connections. The network of white lines resembles the nervous system, maps of constellations or fading memory, and the moving swarm introduces a pulse of life and anxiety.
This is a painting about the boundary between the individual and the crowd, between the body and the cosmos.