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Other details :
Artwork on supported wooden frame. Ready to hang. Framing on request.
Dimensions :
31.5x23.6in
About this artwork
I'm trying to reach something from distant childhood – those pure, bright moments I know are still inside me, but they slip away through layers of time and later memories. Like trying to see a landscape through dust and haze: soft blues and ochres hint at meadows and lakes, but the images dissolve. Is that water, or just a mirage? The harder I try to focus, the more they blur.
The painting draws a parallel between childhood memories and the planet's… untouched nature – both once clear, now obscured. Adult memories accumulate like industrial exhaust in the Anthropocene: anxieties, disappointments, the weight we assign to things. They form a haze between us and what was pure, just as human traces gradually embed themselves in the material fabric of the landscape.
Nature here acts as a carrier of memory – absorbing, transforming, preserving traces. The blurred bands are fragments of what remains beneath accumulation and erosion.
Konstantin Danilov (also known as Zmogk) is a Moscow-born painter and muralist based in Athens. His practice grew out of early work in 1990s Russian graffiti and later shifted toward studio-based painting, where color and structure became primary tools for exploring internal states shaped by lived experience.
His work focuses on boundary conditions: between inner and outer experience, stability and tension, adaptation and loss. Using layered color fields, semi-abstract landscapes, and restrained figurative traces, he examines moments of fragile balance, quiet pressure, and psychological transition over time.
A recurring method in his practice is the “active perimeter,” where the edges of the canvas function as an emotional membrane rather than a neutral frame. Color operates not decoratively, but as a carrier of pressure, memory, and slow transformation, inviting a sustained and attentive dialogue with the viewer.