Sadovay-Kudrinskaya street, 25, 3rd floor, office 303, 123001
+7 (915) 113 55 15
patinated bronze, casting
24х11 cm, Н-40 cm, 2023
The sculptor engages in a creative dialogue with the author of the famous "Discobolus," Myron. The ancient Greek athlete is captured in a state of tension and focus, ready to launch the disc as far forward as possible, like a coiled spring.
His delicate and graceful counterpart is depicted in a moment of dance. Her pose is open, with her arms and the disc thrown backward, her head facing downward, but her entire figure with a slender waist is aimed upward. Like a stretched slingshot, she is prepared to launch her tambourine, the sun's disc, into the zenith.
Her goal is not competition but a beautiful daily ritual. The Mistress of the Sun launches the luminary into the sky, so that at the end of the day, she or her evening sister can lower the setting sun below the horizon. The goddess's body is of the same golden bronze hue as the sun's disc, and her gray patina dress still retains the receding shades of the night, through which her radiant hands and a leg peek through a slit in her clothing.
Through the movement and rhythm, faithfully rendered in the motionless sculpture, the author symbolically interprets the beginning of the natural cycle, the morning dawn, as a magical dance of nature.
Sadovay-Kudrinskaya street, 25, 3rd floor, office 303, 123001
+7 (915) 113 55 15
Nevsky Prospekt, 57, Hotel "Corinthia St. Petersburg" 191025,
+7 (911) 932 11 53
Corner of the Marriott Yerevan hotel building