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Brigita Kasperaitė’s ongoing artistic research explores alternative ways of living and organizing society, drawing on prehistoric cosmologies, symbolic systems, and material technologies to imagine other social structures possible in the contemporary world. Engaging with the framework of archaeomythology, her work bridges Neolithic goddess cultures and contemporary technological landscapes – where silicon stones, serpent motifs, and speculative reconstruction become tools for rethinking value, power, and relationality. Through this lens, she reconsiders how the symbolic and the sensual might guide us in shaping not only images and objects, but also ways of being together.
At the core of the exhibition is a series of 3D-printed goddess figures, modeled from the archaeological drawings found in Marija Gimbutas’ book Die Sprache der Göttin (The Language of the Goddess). These Neolithic figurines – symbols of fertility and birth, power, renewal, and death – are often only...More
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Press Release
Brigita Kasperaitė’s ongoing artistic research explores alternative ways of living and organizing society, drawing on prehistoric cosmologies, symbolic systems, and material technologies to imagine other social structures possible in the contemporary world. Engaging with the framework of archaeomythology, her work bridges Neolithic goddess cultures and contemporary technological landscapes – where silicon stones, serpent motifs, and speculative reconstruction become tools for rethinking value, power, and relationality. Through this lens, she reconsiders how the symbolic and the sensual might guide us in shaping not only images and objects, but also ways of being together.
At the core of the exhibition is a series of 3D-printed goddess figures, modeled from the archaeological drawings found in Marija Gimbutas’ book Die Sprache der Göttin (The Language of the Goddess). These Neolithic figurines – symbols of fertility and birth, power, renewal, and death – are often only...More