Inna Etuvgi - Scrolling Time - Catawiki Special Edition - 1/25






Has over ten years of experience in art, specialising in post-war photography and contemporary art.
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Description from the seller
SCROLLING TIME
Fine Art Print by Inna Etuvgi
"Scrolling Time" acts as a mirror to our 21st-century digital rituals, capturing a modern trance: a state where we "chew" through an endless feed of news, inflating information like fragile bubbles before they dissolve into nothingness.
This portrait is a humorous yet pointed reflection of our new habits, highlighting through the visual language of the Dutch Golden Age how little we have changed as humans. It shows how the infinite scroll melts our minutes into a soft oblivion, blurring the boundary between true presence and the digital void.
Don't you feel the fragility of time, disappearing one swipe at a time?
EDITION:
This work is presented in a Special Collector’s Configuration (40x32 cm image on 43x36 cm paper). While the artist’s larger-scale Master Editions are represented in premier online galleries, this specific size is part of a curated series designed to make museum-grade photography accessible for versatile interior spaces.
Produced to the highest archival standards, this configuration is available exclusively through the artist’s studio or via selected auction releases. It is not offered through other galleries or platforms in this specific size.
ABOUT THE PRINT:
Type: Original Fine Art Print (Macro Photography)
Image Size: 40 x 32 cm
Paper Size: 43 x 36 cm
Paper: Archival Museum-quality paper, 100% cotton, 300gsm
Edition: 1/25
Authenticity: Signed and numbered by the artist; includes a Certificate of Authenticity.
Condition: New, shipped directly from the artist's studio in Sweden.
ABOUT THE ARTIST
Inna Etuvgi is a Swedish-Chukchi artist whose work defines the concept of Cybernetic Animism — a bridge between indigenous Arctic intuition and technical precision. A finalist of the Arte Laguna Prize (Venice) and a recipient of a grant from the Swedish Arts Grants Committee, her work is held in private collections worldwide.
As art critic Tabish Khan notes: “Her work transports us to other worlds—both real and imaginary, but always in harmony with nature.”
SCROLLING TIME
Fine Art Print by Inna Etuvgi
"Scrolling Time" acts as a mirror to our 21st-century digital rituals, capturing a modern trance: a state where we "chew" through an endless feed of news, inflating information like fragile bubbles before they dissolve into nothingness.
This portrait is a humorous yet pointed reflection of our new habits, highlighting through the visual language of the Dutch Golden Age how little we have changed as humans. It shows how the infinite scroll melts our minutes into a soft oblivion, blurring the boundary between true presence and the digital void.
Don't you feel the fragility of time, disappearing one swipe at a time?
EDITION:
This work is presented in a Special Collector’s Configuration (40x32 cm image on 43x36 cm paper). While the artist’s larger-scale Master Editions are represented in premier online galleries, this specific size is part of a curated series designed to make museum-grade photography accessible for versatile interior spaces.
Produced to the highest archival standards, this configuration is available exclusively through the artist’s studio or via selected auction releases. It is not offered through other galleries or platforms in this specific size.
ABOUT THE PRINT:
Type: Original Fine Art Print (Macro Photography)
Image Size: 40 x 32 cm
Paper Size: 43 x 36 cm
Paper: Archival Museum-quality paper, 100% cotton, 300gsm
Edition: 1/25
Authenticity: Signed and numbered by the artist; includes a Certificate of Authenticity.
Condition: New, shipped directly from the artist's studio in Sweden.
ABOUT THE ARTIST
Inna Etuvgi is a Swedish-Chukchi artist whose work defines the concept of Cybernetic Animism — a bridge between indigenous Arctic intuition and technical precision. A finalist of the Arte Laguna Prize (Venice) and a recipient of a grant from the Swedish Arts Grants Committee, her work is held in private collections worldwide.
As art critic Tabish Khan notes: “Her work transports us to other worlds—both real and imaginary, but always in harmony with nature.”
