Helen Shulkin
Helen Shulkin is a German artist currently based and working in Hamburg. In her work, she touches upon the connection between external architectural changes and internal transformations in consciousness, which reflect a transition from rigid, immutable structures to more flexible, adaptable forms of thought and existence. Architecture here is not just a backdrop or context, but an embodiment of time and its spirit.
Her recent work has focused on “Architecture as a Human Body.” This conceptual framework explores the deep connections between urban environments and the human form. “My art reveals the essence of both human and architectural anatomy in their convergence, portraying our built environment as an extension of our own being.”
Helen Shulkin is a German artist currently based and working in Hamburg. In her work, she touches upon the connection between external architectural changes and internal transformations in consciousness, which reflect a transition from rigid, immutable structures to more flexible, adaptable forms of thought and existence. Architecture here is not just a backdrop or context, but an embodiment of time and its spirit.
Her recent work has focused on “Architecture as a Human Body.” This conceptual framework explores the deep connections between urban environments and the human form. “My art reveals the essence of both human and architectural anatomy in their convergence, portraying our built environment as an extension of our own being.”
Helen Shulkin is a German artist currently based and working in Hamburg. In her work, she touches upon the connection between external architectural changes and internal transformations in consciousness, which reflect a transition from rigid, immutable structures to more flexible, adaptable forms of thought and existence. Architecture here is not just a backdrop or context, but an embodiment of time and its spirit.
Her recent work has focused on “Architecture as a Human Body.” This conceptual framework explores the deep connections between urban environments and the human form. “My art reveals the essence of both human and architectural anatomy in their convergence, portraying our built environment as an extension of our own being.”