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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
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Alena Mukhina
Nottingham, UK
Alena Mukhina is a UK-based ceramic artist, specializing on a highly-textured ceramic sculptures. Her objects combine biomorphic forms with complex multi-layered surfaces. Praising the material of ceramics she uses non-traditional techniques to avoid texture overlap and stay with deep natural colors of clay itself. Born in USSR, Alena received a degree in architecture, but very soon started to work with ceramics and has undertaken a number of workshops, and continues her education at the Joseph Backstein Institute of Contemporary Art. The artist’s focus revolves around human self-identity, aging, migration, and the multifaceted aspects of human transformation, viewing it as a complex and multidimensional phenomenon.
Alena Mukhina’s ceramic sculptures explore transformation— not as a singular event, but as a continuous, layered process. Her biomorphic forms emerge from clay that resists finality, shaped by time, touch, and tension. Deeply textured and unglazed, her surfaces retain the raw, natural tones of the material itself, often infused with fragments of previously fired ceramics. This practice— mixing the old into the new— embodies a quiet philosophy of renewal and return.
For Mukhina, clay is a medium of impermanence and reconstruction. Her works capture transitional states: gestures paused, forms in flux, structures that suggest movement even in stillness. Themes of identity, aging, and migration are not illustrated, but felt— etched into every crack, layer, and edge. Her sculptures become tactile reflections of life’s evolving nature, where fragility and resilience are inseparable, and nothing is ever truly finished.
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Objects from the series "Nodes" embody a moment of reassembly — a frozen gesture, a state without fixed form. They emerge through intersections, tension, and fluid flexibility. Their surfaces, veined with spreading fractures, evoke a sense of both rebirth and transience — a tactile record of the moment suspended between action and counteraction.
The Logs series was created to evoke a sense of warmth and to incorporate nature as an integral element of the work. The cracking texture further reinforces the themes of rebirth and impermanence, offering a tactile reference to the interplay of action and resistance.
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