Yevgenia Davidoff

Short Artist Statement

My work explores themes of memory, loss, and transformation through sculpture, painting, and installation. Rooted in personal experiences—immigration, the early loss of my mother, and a childhood shaped by Soviet-era Moscow—I use architecture, domestic objects, and natural forms as visual metaphors for time, belonging, and spiritual seeking.

Influenced by my mother’s love for wildflowers, I’m drawn to the overlooked and impermanent. I work with cast cement, glass, and light to create pieces that reflect the fragile beauty of life’s in-between spaces. My practice embraces contrasts—man-made and organic, durable and delicate—as a way to hold complexity and stillness at once.

Art, for me, is a meditative act and a quiet resistance to a world of speed and commodification. I invite viewers to slow down, look closely, and reconnect with wonder. Inspired by artists like Hilma af Klint, Sarah Sze, and Suzanne Anker, I approach the intersection of ecology, memory, and spirituality as both material and meaning—seeking the sacred in what is often dismissed or unseen.