

Artseeker Gallery and MORA Museum
2024 - January, 6
Artseeker Gallery and MORA Museum Present "Woman: Balancing Our World" from December 15, 2023, to January 4, 2024
80 Grand Street Jersey City, NJ 07302 MORA
The show emerges at a moment when the feminist discourse in art is shifting from protest to integration—from external advocacy to the reimagining of how we perceive the world itself. In the post-pandemic and post-digital landscape, balance becomes a new paradigm of resistance.
“Woman: Balancing Our World” responds to this shift by positioning the feminine not as a gendered category, but as a principle of coexistence; one that rebuilds the link between body, nature, and emotion in a society dominated by abstraction and acceleration.
Exhibition Architecture: Four Halls, Four Dimensions of the Feminine
The exhibition unfolds through four thematic halls, each representing an aspect of the woman’s world and her connection to the ecosystem of life:
Hall 1 — “Women in Art: Female Artists and Their Inspiring Stories”
A tribute to female artists who chose art as their path of transformation.
Works by GerDa, Katrin Rymsha, Anastasiia Comicada, Vera Hoi, Anastassia Skopp, Kevich Anastacia, Olga Tiho and GANNA reveal intimate narratives of self-discovery and resilience. These pieces move beyond biographical reflection, turning personal emotion into universal form—a hallmark of contemporary feminist abstraction.
Hall 2 — “Harmony with Nature: Women and Ecology”
Here, artists such as VICTO, Uliana Sal, Svetlana Saprykina, Irina Petrova, Yulia Belasla, Anna Voronina and Abramova Darina explore the symbiosis between the human and the natural. Their works transform environmental concern into visual poetry, celebrating empathy as a form of ecological consciousness.
The hall draws attention to how the female gaze reshapes the language of nature as a living, breathing entity connected to human emotion.
Hall 3 — “Grace in Nature: Women and Animals”
Through works by Prostoksyushen, VICTO and Anastasya Lyulina the viewer encounters the animal as a metaphor for instinct, protection, and freedom. The recurring motif of touch between woman and creature symbolizes the restoration of care, the lost bond between civilization and the living world.
Hall 4 — “Family Values: The Continuation of the Lineage”
This section reflects on the archetype of the woman as keeper of memory and emotional continuity.
Elena Baurecht, Victo, Ekaterina Krylova, Katty Kot and Anastasia Ovsyannikova use the language of gesture, texture, and domestic imagery to depict the spiritual fabric of home and family both as refuge and as cultural foundation.
Across all four halls, the exhibition reveals that the feminine is not confined to domesticity, but expands into a universal rhythm of connection, extending from personal life to collective consciousness.
While thematically diverse, the participating artists share a visual and emotional sincerity that distinguishes the show from purely conceptual feminist projects.
Many works employ natural materials, fluid lines, and biomorphic forms, bridging tactile and spiritual experience. Others experiment with symbolic figuration, where female silhouettes dissolve into landscapes, waves, or cosmic textures.
The interplay of light, texture, and color becomes a language of empathy—transforming traditional representation into sensory experience.
The result is an exhibition that feels both contemplative and alive, balancing aesthetic harmony with philosophical depth.
In collaboration with the MORA Museum, “Woman: Balancing Our World” builds a dialogue between Eastern European and American female artists, expanding the geography of contemporary feminist art beyond mainstream Western narratives. This collaboration highlights Artseeker Gallery’s mission to create platforms for independent voices, connecting emotional authenticity with curatorial precision. The project also aligns with global trends, where museums and galleries shift from identity politics toward eco-feminism, care aesthetics, and ethics of attention.
“Woman: Balancing Our World” is not merely a thematic exhibition; it is an invitation to rethink what balance means in contemporary life.
It asks: how can art restore empathy in a time of fragmentation? What does strength look like when it is expressed through care rather than control?
Through the collective voices of artists this project redefines the feminine as an act of healing—a force that holds the world together, one gesture, one story, one image at a time.
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