Inna Etuvgi - Berliner Fernsehturm






Oltre 35 anni di esperienza; ex proprietario di galleria e curatore al Museum Folkwang.
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BERLINER FERNSEHTURM
Fine Art Photography by Inna Etuvgi
Through the lens of macro photography, a fleeting morning moment on a blade of grass transforms into a familiar architectural silhouette. This work is a testament to the breathtaking complexity of the world right beneath our feet, where the "magical" and the "real" are one and the same.
The photo is a part of the "Wonderland Under Our Feet" collection, which serves as evidence that we already live in a fairytale world; we simply need to look closer to see it and to rediscover the quiet poetry of our environment.
ABOUT THE PRINT:
* Tipo: Stampa Fine Art originale (Macro fotografia)
* Dimensione dell'immagine: 30 x 40 cm
* Dimensione della carta: 33 x 43 cm
* Carta: carta museale archivistica di alta qualità, 100% cotone, 300g/m²
* Edizione: 2/25
* Autenticità: Firmata e numerata dall'artista; include un Certificato di Autenticità.
* Condizioni: Nuova, spedita direttamente dallo studio dell'artista in Svezia.
ABOUT THE ARTIST
Inna Etuvgi is a Swedish-Chukchi art photographer and digital artist, internationally recognised as an Arte Laguna Prize finalist (Venice) and a recipient of the Swedish Arts Grants Committee grant. Born in a remote Arctic village in Chukotka and trained in technical cybernetics, she began her artistic practice in 2020 and has since exhibited across Europe — in Venice, London, Barcelona, Palermo, and San Marino.
Etuvgi lives with aphantasia — she cannot see images in her mind. Her camera and AI serve as extensions of her visual imagination, allowing her to create what she cannot picture internally. Through macro photography she enters the hidden worlds of mosses, lichens, and dewdrops; through digital art she gives form to psychological states and inner archetypes. Both are rooted in a deep sensitivity shaped by her Chukchi upbringing — an instinct to feel into every living thing.
As art critic Tabish Khan notes: "Her work transports us to other worlds — both real and imaginary, but always in harmony with nature."
BERLINER FERNSEHTURM
Fine Art Photography by Inna Etuvgi
Through the lens of macro photography, a fleeting morning moment on a blade of grass transforms into a familiar architectural silhouette. This work is a testament to the breathtaking complexity of the world right beneath our feet, where the "magical" and the "real" are one and the same.
The photo is a part of the "Wonderland Under Our Feet" collection, which serves as evidence that we already live in a fairytale world; we simply need to look closer to see it and to rediscover the quiet poetry of our environment.
ABOUT THE PRINT:
* Tipo: Stampa Fine Art originale (Macro fotografia)
* Dimensione dell'immagine: 30 x 40 cm
* Dimensione della carta: 33 x 43 cm
* Carta: carta museale archivistica di alta qualità, 100% cotone, 300g/m²
* Edizione: 2/25
* Autenticità: Firmata e numerata dall'artista; include un Certificato di Autenticità.
* Condizioni: Nuova, spedita direttamente dallo studio dell'artista in Svezia.
ABOUT THE ARTIST
Inna Etuvgi is a Swedish-Chukchi art photographer and digital artist, internationally recognised as an Arte Laguna Prize finalist (Venice) and a recipient of the Swedish Arts Grants Committee grant. Born in a remote Arctic village in Chukotka and trained in technical cybernetics, she began her artistic practice in 2020 and has since exhibited across Europe — in Venice, London, Barcelona, Palermo, and San Marino.
Etuvgi lives with aphantasia — she cannot see images in her mind. Her camera and AI serve as extensions of her visual imagination, allowing her to create what she cannot picture internally. Through macro photography she enters the hidden worlds of mosses, lichens, and dewdrops; through digital art she gives form to psychological states and inner archetypes. Both are rooted in a deep sensitivity shaped by her Chukchi upbringing — an instinct to feel into every living thing.
As art critic Tabish Khan notes: "Her work transports us to other worlds — both real and imaginary, but always in harmony with nature."
