Materials and the process
The impact different materials have on Olga’s work can’t be underestimated.
“Sometimes you’ve got an idea in your head,” she says, “and you understand what it will look like, and you do a lot of work step by step by achieving the results you have in your head. But sometimes, you just go from the material, which gives you all the necessary understanding of what you want to do and what you can achieve.”
“I enjoy the making very much,” says Olga, “Of course, I love to see the result. But the process itself really gives me lots of emotions. I love it. I do everything myself, all the processes by my hand. I enjoy it because I can communicate with the material and listen to it. Sometimes I get an idea from the material because sometimes, it wants to be polished. Sometimes it wants to be burned. Sometimes it wants to be covered with paint or epoxy resin or something like this. So I’m trying to listen, to understand what the material says to me.”
The reality of war
Living in Ukraine, Olga is experiencing life in a very different way at the moment, “It is true, we’re really living in the middle of the war,” she says, “you cannot plan anything. I’m staying in Kyiv, the capital of Ukraine, and it has been under missile attack almost every day, almost every night, and you never know if you will be safe in the morning or not.
But this is the reality we can deal with. We really have learnt how to live with this. It’s hard to explain, but we have got used to this war. It’s terrible to understand for normal people, but we are not normal anymore. Having no plans has become part of our life. You can’t plan for half a day because you don’t know if a missile attack will come at any moment. You never know where exactly you will be in this moment and if you will survive or not; you also never know.
This scares you a little bit, but also it gives you that much energy. Don’t postpone. Don’t waste your time. Do anything you can do just now. Don’t wait, do it.”