What grows in surrender

€1,800.00

Medium: Mixed media wall sculpture

Dimensions: 68 x 46 x 3 cm

Year: 2026

Material: Recycled paper, acryl, ogranic materials, plaster, wood.

Artist: L.DUKOWA

This wall relief emerges from a practice of inner listening, transformation and the process of letting go. Shaped from recycled paper, plaster, acrylic, and traces of organic life carefully collected over the time, it holds a landscape of soft erosion, quiet density, and fragile growth. Its surface feels like a body of memory — layered, weathered, and alive — where pink, white, earth tones, and dark mineral-like marks drift together in a state between wound and bloom.

The work is created through a process of release, where control is intentionally loosened and the material is allowed to reveal itself in its own time. What appears is not planned but discovered: an unfolding of matter, intuition, and becoming. In this piece, cotton seeds hidden within the materials found the conditions to grow, becoming a living metaphor for the work’s deeper truth — that when control is surrendered, life begins to move, root, and rise.

Medium: Mixed media wall sculpture

Dimensions: 68 x 46 x 3 cm

Year: 2026

Material: Recycled paper, acryl, ogranic materials, plaster, wood.

Artist: L.DUKOWA

This wall relief emerges from a practice of inner listening, transformation and the process of letting go. Shaped from recycled paper, plaster, acrylic, and traces of organic life carefully collected over the time, it holds a landscape of soft erosion, quiet density, and fragile growth. Its surface feels like a body of memory — layered, weathered, and alive — where pink, white, earth tones, and dark mineral-like marks drift together in a state between wound and bloom.

The work is created through a process of release, where control is intentionally loosened and the material is allowed to reveal itself in its own time. What appears is not planned but discovered: an unfolding of matter, intuition, and becoming. In this piece, cotton seeds hidden within the materials found the conditions to grow, becoming a living metaphor for the work’s deeper truth — that when control is surrendered, life begins to move, root, and rise.