From Seed to Flower
“From Seed to Flower” is about a person’s becoming and inner growth—a path that starts from a tiny, almost invisible seed and slowly unfolds into bloom. This path is neither linear nor fast: it needs time, care, and good soil in the form of memory and connection with what came before us.
Instead of illustration, the artists offer space for contemplation and personal associations: development is shown through forms, materials, and rhythms reminiscent of natural processes.
The seed here is both a symbol of the beginning of life and a carrier of DNA—memory and values. It contains the experience of past generations, their strength and vulnerability, and its own uniqueness.
The spiral—one of the key motifs in textile and jewelry pieces—symbolizes inner motion and continuous transformation. It evokes self-awareness where returning to origins is not a step back but a new turn of growth.
The flower is not a final stage but a peak moment of unfolding, when accumulated experience becomes visible and takes shape.
Materials and techniques highlight the polarities of any transformation: fragility and instability on one side, flexibility and resolve on the other. Pearl, metal, malachite, embroidery threads, and fabrics—fruits of natural processes transformed by the artists’ hands—remind us that becoming is always a dialogue between the external and the internal, the given and the acquired.
“From Seed to Flower” is the artists’ reflection on the most important conditions for growth and development—and an invitation to explore your own.
Instead of illustration, the artists offer space for contemplation and personal associations: development is shown through forms, materials, and rhythms reminiscent of natural processes.
The seed here is both a symbol of the beginning of life and a carrier of DNA—memory and values. It contains the experience of past generations, their strength and vulnerability, and its own uniqueness.
The spiral—one of the key motifs in textile and jewelry pieces—symbolizes inner motion and continuous transformation. It evokes self-awareness where returning to origins is not a step back but a new turn of growth.
The flower is not a final stage but a peak moment of unfolding, when accumulated experience becomes visible and takes shape.
Materials and techniques highlight the polarities of any transformation: fragility and instability on one side, flexibility and resolve on the other. Pearl, metal, malachite, embroidery threads, and fabrics—fruits of natural processes transformed by the artists’ hands—remind us that becoming is always a dialogue between the external and the internal, the given and the acquired.
“From Seed to Flower” is the artists’ reflection on the most important conditions for growth and development—and an invitation to explore your own.