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Section 2


Stretching of a Spoon of Sugar
into a Familiar Body
2022 - Ongoing





Weather Conversations
2025 -  Ongoing


Oil on cotton, 20,5 x 29,8 cm
2025 

The painting is divided into two sections by a horizontal line that is broken by the upper section, which is composed of non-figurative shapes resembling smoke and clouds. These forms are painted in grays, warm whites, pale greens, and blues against a puce, burnt-rose–colored background. The brushstrokes are textured and loose, offering a degree of transparency.
A bright sky-cobalt blue line is positioned high in the composition, almost above the clouds and parallel to the horizon.
The lower section is painted in darker tones of brown and green, with elements of gray that loosely suggest a mirroring of the upper section. The brushstrokes here are denser and more layered.







How to Hold
2025  - Ongoing
Pastel, watercolor on paper
2025 

A composition made with loose, layered lines in red, pink, brown, and gray tones. The drawing contains several stacked oval and cone-like shapes aligned vertically along a central axis. Thin circular rings intersect the forms at different heights. The lines are sketchy and overlapping, with visible marks extending beyond the main structure.

A similar vertically arranged composition rendered with heavier application of dark red, magenta, and burgundy tones. A large bowl- or funnel-shaped form appears at the top, narrowing downward into a central stem. Several oval rings encircle the stem. The lower section contains dense, dark brushstrokes and smudged areas, while lighter sketch marks remain visible around the edges.






Chronic Anatomies

A series of drawings that engage with conditions of chronic pain through references to representations of the body found in anatomical atlases. The works portray the sick body as mutable, in motion, and in escape, resisting both verbal description and scientific visual language, as the series emerges from the encounter with the idea that pain often escapes the frameworks given for its description and interpretation.

In response to the depiction of a fixed anatomy, the drawings seek forms that dissolve, repeat, and reorganize, suggesting a body continually renegotiating itself in response to persistent sensation.
A series of current 15 drawings
Watercolor, pastel, and pencil  (21 x 29,7 cm)
2023 - Ongoing








Circuits
2025












Rooted Shelter Oil and St. John's root on cotton  (50 x 39,5 cm)
2025






Folding, Enfolding Gestures
Painting
2023 - Ongoing


Selection of eight paintings  
Oil crayon, oil, pen on cardboard (15 x 15,5 cm) 

The image shows small works arranged in a loose grid against a white background. Each piece I painted on an unfolded piece of cardboard packaging from empty medicine boxes, where fragments of barcodes, drug labeling, and the original box design are visible. 

Their surfaces are layered with painterly marks in varied palettes—earthy browns, maroons, reds, deep greens, blacks, and occasional bright blues. Some compositions feature circular or looping gestures, while others are dense and gestural, with smudges, washes, and scribbled lines. In certain pieces, faint drawn elements, such as loose linear sketches or dotted patterns, interact with the painted areas.








Chiron
2025





Now is Night
2022 





Anastasija (Nastija) Kiake
anakiake@gmail.com
@anastasijakiake
I’m a visual artist and writer working between The Hague and Copenhagen.
My practice engages with the ways social, political, and spiritual conditions are shaped by economies of feeling, ecologies of belonging, and structures of violence. Situated within the context of post-Soviet identity formation, alongside experiences of disability and im/migration in Scandinavia and Western Europe, my work primarily focuses on developing methods for negotiating language and narration.



























































Last Updated  11.02.2026



Anastasija (Nastija) Kiake
anakiake@gmail.com
@anastasijakiake


I’m a visual artist and writer working between The Hague and Copenhagen.
My practice engages with the ways social, political, and spiritual conditions are shaped by economies of feeling, ecologies of belonging, and structures of violence. Situated within the context of post-Soviet identity formation, alongside experiences of disability and im/migration in Scandinavia and Western Europe, my work primarily focuses on developing methods for negotiating language and narration.



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