2021 – Logotherapy through art
2021 – Logotherapy through art
Museum Art Therapy
Male – Female: My Visual History
On February 27, the Cherkasy Regional Museum hosted an interactive meeting dedicated to the archetypes of the Male-Female and their figurative representations in artistic creation and in one’s own drawings. The Platonic myth of the Androgyne, Jungian theory of the Anima-Animus, and the latest concepts of gender became the theoretical basis for art practice, in which the creative potential of the “inner woman” and the “inner man” were revealed through graphic images.
They talked about gender roles in the history of culture, gender features of the expression of aggression, the balance of the masculine and feminine at three levels of self-consciousness.
The exhibition of graphic works by Yevgenia Vasylchenko “Splashes of Beads” encouraged the search for the symbolic language of one’s own unconscious, metaphors, and associations on a given topic.
Yevgenia’s graphic works are not about the earthly, they are beyond. The more you look at these images, the more logical their connection seems, but in some of them there is a feeling of loss of codes for revealing their content. Through associations and visual metaphors, the artist seems to want to teach us to “pick up the keys” to the transcendent, so that there is a gradual understanding of the secret logic of the images of planets, houses, trees in a space devoid of the laws of gravity. Evgenia boldly confronts the ugly and the beautiful, problematizes the body and corporeality.
It seems that the artist wants to throw off the shackles of limitations, all kinds of masks and find the truth behind them, to find out how life outside the body is possible and what this life is like? Then Evgenia sets off on a journey in search of a spiritualized body.
This body is presented in works where we see symbolic representations of images of the masculine and feminine. And it is this symbolic fusion that forms a harmonious space of the initial androgynous unity.
We invite you to reflect on this together…
Project curators: Oksana Pushonkova and Zoya Shevchenko






