Discover the creation in interiors
Artwork details
- Medium : Acrylic, Sand on Canvas
- Other details : Artwork on supported wooden frame. Ready to hang. Framing on request.
- Dimensions : 9.8x9.8in
About this artwork
“Between Marks” is part of the ongoing In Between series, inspired by the Japanese philosophy of the space in between.
Built with layers of acrylic and sand, the work explores gesture, erasure, and surface.
A limited palette of burnt sienna, black, and white creates a visual rhythm. Texture serves as evidence—of interruption, memory, and presence.
This piece invites the viewer into a space where silence is filled with weight and the breath of… a trace.
Built with layers of acrylic and sand, the work explores gesture, erasure, and surface.
A limited palette of burnt sienna, black, and white creates a visual rhythm. Texture serves as evidence—of interruption, memory, and presence.
This piece invites the viewer into a space where silence is filled with weight and the breath of… a trace.
Elena Gorn
Israel
Credentials
- Works on commission
Born and raised in Moscow, Russia, Elena Gorn (b. 1978) is a Russian artist currently residing in Tel Aviv-Yafo, Israel. She works at the intersection of painting and contemporary art.
Elena’s practice probes the phenomenon of memory: through painting, drawing, sand, and color she captures visual recollections and reinterprets nostalgic household objects alongside her experience of aliyah, weaving personal moments into a broader cultural narrative. She also investigates the aesthetics of biological forms and materials, stating:
In these impressions and substances I search for the past and the future—the presence and absence of the material world within space.
An ongoing artist’s journal—dedicated to reflection, material research, and process analysis—deepens her conceptual engagement.
Now based in Tel Aviv, Elena maintains an active studio practice.
Elena’s practice probes the phenomenon of memory: through painting, drawing, sand, and color she captures visual recollections and reinterprets nostalgic household objects alongside her experience of aliyah, weaving personal moments into a broader cultural narrative. She also investigates the aesthetics of biological forms and materials, stating:
In these impressions and substances I search for the past and the future—the presence and absence of the material world within space.
An ongoing artist’s journal—dedicated to reflection, material research, and process analysis—deepens her conceptual engagement.
Now based in Tel Aviv, Elena maintains an active studio practice.