Sign up for our newsletter

Stay informed on our latest news!

Once Leda Found an Egg — Blue Like a Hyacinth

 

Born in Kerch, Crimea, Kulikovska’s life and work are inseparable from the political turbulence that has shaped Ukraine over the past decade. Her performances, direct confrontations with Russian aggression and authoritarianism, have landed her on Russia’s intelligence blacklist, making her a target of surveillance and persecution. Yet she remains undeterred, staging protest actions across Ukraine and Europe, defiantly challenging colonial and patriarchal structures.

 

In 2014, the same year she was banned, Russian forces seized the Izolyatsia art center in Donetsk, where her sculptures stood alongside works by Cai Guo-Qiang and Pascale Marthine Tayou, turning it into a prison and torture site. Her casts, molded from her own body, were destroyed. Years later, prisoners uncovered the shattered fragments, a haunting metaphor for both personal and national erasure.

 

In Ukraine, her feminist initiative Flowers of Democracy shook up societal norms with a clothing line featuring images of her vulva, igniting both acclaim and backlash. Her exhibition at Mriya Gallery is an extension of this philosophy. Once Leda Found an Egg — Blue Like a Hyacinth explores themes of motherhood, trauma, and survival through body casts, performance relics, and documentation of her politically charged actions. The pieces reflect the sculptures lost at Izolyatsia, turning destruction into rebirth. Recent video works and drawings reflect on the complexities of motherhood during wartime, making the personal unapologetically political. The exhibition also features the eighth installment of her performance Lustration / Ablution, where she cleanses herself in a bathtub filled with soap sculptures, symbolizing the intricate relationship between trauma, conflict, and healing.

In my work, I only create and speak about what I’ve experienced because I don’t think I have the right to do anything else

 

This exhibition is particularly significant, opening just days before the third anniversary of Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine (February 24, 2025), and the anniversary of the Day of Resistance against the Occupation of Crimea and the City of Sevastopol (February 26, 2025). With the rise of Trump’s administration, which aims to limit bodily autonomy and suppress women’s rights, these themes have become even more pressing. The exhibition serves as a powerful statement on the urgent need to defend bodily autonomy and the rights of women everywhere.

 

On Display

February 24 - March 5, 2025

Address: Mriya Gallery, 101 Reade St, New York, NY, 10013

Confirm your age

Please confirm that you are at least 18 years old.

I confirm Whooops!