The concept of "metanoia" originates from ancient Greek tradition and signifies a profound change in one’s way of thinking, a reorientation of consciousness, and internal transformation.
In contemporary humanitarian discourse, metanoia is viewed not as a one-time act, but as a prolonged process of self-discovery—or rather, a review of one’s own experience and a rethinking of one's relationship with the surrounding world. It is a continuous state of transition from destruction toward the perception and birth of something new.
The exhibition METANOIA proposes viewing art as the spatial dimension in which this transition occurs. The works presented do not fix completed images as final conclusions; rather, they demonstrate the course of internal transformation—a movement between memory and experience, matter and sensation, the personal and the collective.
Olesya Rybchenko’s practice focuses on the cultural and psychological layers of memory. It is shaped through the accumulation of gestures, rhythms, and color structures as traces of what has been lived. The artist’s works are in constant development, where the image is not fixed; they illustrate its very emergence. In this context, painting rethinks reality rather than merely representing it. Fragmentation, layering, and repetition serve as ways to realize internal changes and seek new integrity following losses or metamorphoses, building a participatory dialogue with the viewer as a necessary ritual.
In Yuriy Voytovich’s work, metanoia manifests in his interaction with material and plastic form. The artist’s ceramic objects combine archetypal motifs with individual artistic gestures in the realm between cultural memory and personal experience. In his works, the material does not merely acquire configurations but also preserves traces of time and direct contact with the environment. Thus, ceramics become a medium for slow reflection.
In a broader context, the exhibition touches upon issues particularly relevant today: how to experience change, how to work with memory…
METANOIA does not offer a ready-made narrative; instead, it reflects a personal moment of feeling, where the process of continuous dialogue is more important than the result. In this sense, it becomes not just the theme of the exhibition, but a method of interaction—and an opportunity to see oneself.