Artists
Marina BaiselAtelier MartisThibeau ScarcériauxSfossilsAlena MukhinaSofia KarnukaevaLumi UniNitush-ArooshIra BoykoMomoka GomiZlata KornilovaDROZHDINIAdriana MeuniéAlexandra VolskayaSee allArtists
Marina BaiselAtelier MartisThibeau ScarcériauxSfossilsAlena MukhinaSofia KarnukaevaLumi UniNitush-ArooshIra BoykoMomoka GomiZlata KornilovaDROZHDINIAdriana MeuniéAlexandra VolskayaSee allPrivacy overview
Privacy overview
Strictly necessary cookies
3rd party cookies
Additional cookies
Strictly Necessary Cookies
Strictly Necessary Cookie should be enabled at all times so that we can save your preferences for cookie settings.
Disable
Timeless, Sculpture
Zlata KornilovaMy story is a journey — a path unfolding step by step, beginning at the very origin. We ascend the steps of history while preserving the memory of where we come from.
The beginning is not emptiness — it is form, it is the vessel. As it fills, it sustains and nourishes life. The shape of these steps, much like the growth rings of a tree, is echoed throughout the elements of the design.
The work incorporates reclaimed wood — timber with its own history, salvaged from old houses. Its visible imperfections are deeply captivating; they reveal a quiet kind of magic that exposes the inner essence of things.
The series draws inspiration from traditional Russian household vessels: the krynka (milk jug), kubyshka (storage jar), krupnik (grain container), and chugunok (cast-iron pot). Today, such objects have nearly disappeared from modern homes. They survive only in remote villages, and even there mostly as memories.
It is precisely this memory that I chose to carry into my wooden works — reinterpreting and transforming it into contemporary objects for the home, imbued with warmth, comfort, and inherited wisdom.
Details
Material
Pine wood, metal, acrylic, oil
Dimensions
70 x 30 cm
Delivery
We deliver across the EU and UK. Shipping costs are calculated individually after your order and confirmed by our team. For other destinations, delivery may be arranged upon request.
We recommend insured shipping; NM Art & Design is not liable for transit damages without insurance.
More details in our Delivery Policy.
Have questions? Contact us
Timeless, Sculpture
Have questions? Contact us
My story is a journey — a path unfolding step by step, beginning at the very origin. We ascend the steps of history while preserving the memory of where we come from.
The beginning is not emptiness — it is form, it is the vessel. As it fills, it sustains and nourishes life. The shape of these steps, much like the growth rings of a tree, is echoed throughout the elements of the design.
The work incorporates reclaimed wood — timber with its own history, salvaged from old houses. Its visible imperfections are deeply captivating; they reveal a quiet kind of magic that exposes the inner essence of things.
The series draws inspiration from traditional Russian household vessels: the krynka (milk jug), kubyshka (storage jar), krupnik (grain container), and chugunok (cast-iron pot). Today, such objects have nearly disappeared from modern homes. They survive only in remote villages, and even there mostly as memories.
It is precisely this memory that I chose to carry into my wooden works — reinterpreting and transforming it into contemporary objects for the home, imbued with warmth, comfort, and inherited wisdom.
Details
Material
Pine wood, metal, acrylic, oil
Dimensions
70 x 30 cm
About Artist
Download сatalogue
Zlata Kornilova is a contemporary artist and sculptor from Russia. In her practice, she seeks to connect with time — capturing fleeting moments and preserving them through material. Through architectural forms and the color palettes of the cities she visits, Zlata explores the seamless intertwining of present and past.
Her artistic vision is inspired by the way nature and time transform man-made objects: sun-bleached paint, darkened wood, oxidized metal. She sees nature and time as the best decorators — and believes there is always something to learn from them.
A central theme in her work is the wooden box as sculpture — what she calls a “space for the soul,” a place where personal memories and fragments of life can be preserved.
Zlata Kornilova’s sculptural practice is a meditation on memory, nature, and invisible connection. Working primarily with wood, she transforms simple forms — often boxes — into vessels of reflection, imbued with poetic symbolism. Her surfaces echo the quiet traces left by time: weathered textures, faded hues, and subtle ornamentation drawn from architecture, embroidery, and natural decay. Influenced by myth, travel, and craft traditions, Kornilova weaves stories into her sculptures like threads — both seen and unseen. Each piece becomes a contemplative space, holding the tension between what is preserved and what is passing, and inviting the viewer to pause, listen, and remember.