Victoria Olt
Cart 0

Earthborn//Earthbound

This series of artworks explores our relationship with nature, how while living in humanmade cities we often feel disconnected from it, viewing nature as something distant or "other," these works remind us that we are bound to the earth’s rhythms, cycles, and forces. When nature thrives, we thrive; when she rages, we endure the consequences.

Therefore we as viewers should contemplate how our actions ripple through the larger ecosystem, echoing within the ancient forces that govern life on earth. We inhabit a delicate balance, and there are silent but profound truths carried by the winds, waters, and earth itself—truths that, if ignored, may come at great cost.

This series serves as a reminder of the beauty and fury of nature, a force that exists beyond human control or full comprehension.

 

Lost Gods

On January 4th Victoria Olt Gallery unveiled a new exhibition titled Lost Gods, where intricate watercolor techniques were seamlessly blended with the themes of ancient cultures. The highlight of the exhibition was a striking 20 m² installation of paper cranes, a reference to the Japanese legend that promises a wish, often for a long life, to anyone who folds 1,000 origami cranes.

Victoria Olt described the exhibition as a continuation of her ongoing search for meaning, explaining: “Lost Gods was another step in my journey to make sense of the world. After finding little comfort in modern popular religions, I looked to the past to see what wisdom could be gained from ancient civilizations. What I discovered is that many of the struggles our ancestors faced are remarkably similar to the challenges we continue to grapple with today. We are still at the mercy of fate, however we choose to define it. But the lessons from the past—what our ancestors believed about life, death, and human nature—remain deeply relevant, and there’s so much we can learn from them."

 

10_hades_small_whiter.jpg
0069_Dissentient_small.jpg
Melancholia.jpg
2.Gaia_small.jpg