Structure holds what words cannot Contemporary conceptual art built on geometry as a language of knowledge — and the belief that order is not constructed, but recognized.
Tetiana Gryshchenko (Тетяна Грищенко художниця) is a Ukrainian contemporary conceptual artist working with geometric abstraction, sacred geometry, and symbolic minimalism.
Her practice approaches geometry as a visual language of existing order — a way of sensing structure, rhythm, and transformation rather than constructing narratives. Through reduction, repetition, and symbolic form, she works with systems that hold inner states, memory, and perception within a clear structural framework.
Rather than illustrating external stories, Gryshchenko focuses on internal processes and states of stillness. The female form appears not as a portrait or character, but as a vessel — a point where multiplicity, structure, and lived experience intersect within geometric order.
Rooted in the principle of interconnectedness, her work does not propose meaning but allows it to be recognized — through proportion, rhythm, and internal coherence.
Her practice has been presented in international exhibitions, biennales, art fairs, and contemporary art publications.