ABOUT


Hey there! My name is Veronika Gryshchuk. I combine visual art with AI, exploring the intersections of technology, ecology, and design. My practice dives into creating audiovisual experiences that question human and more-than-human perception, training small AI datasets, and pushing the boundaries between digital and real worlds. Originally from Ukraine and now based in Spain, my multicultural background shapes my approach, using design as a way to connect and communicate. With an emphasis on functionality, playfulness, and maker culture, I aim to challenge norms and foster connections between technolog, humans, and nature.


CV
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Instagram



ABOUT


Hey there! My name is Veronika Gryshchuk. I combine visual art with AI, exploring the intersections of technology, ecology, and design. My practice dives into creating audiovisual experiences that question human and more-than-human perception, training small AI datasets, and pushing the boundaries between digital and real worlds. Originally from Ukraine and now based in Spain, my multicultural background shapes my approach, using design as a way to connect and communicate. With an emphasis on functionality, playfulness, and maker culture, I aim to challenge norms and foster connections between technolog, humans, and nature.


CV
Email

Instagram


Fecal Matter         


Fecal Matter is the brainchild of a couple, Hannah and Steven. They have an incredibly radical and sometimes terrifying look
that challenges our society. Steven and Hannah go against fast fashion and
anti-consumerism; they are not looking for Instagram likes; they promote themselves and their brand.
The only way people who support them and share their ideas could get a piece of their haute couture was through the Depop website. So we decided to create a visual system of their fashion designs and post-human aesthetics, creating a virtual pop-up shop bringing their universal language to a wider range of people.

Clothes are like a mirror to the individual. Fecal Matter is very insistent on making it clear that their style, along with the clothes they sell, seeks to provide the user with this need to express themselves freely through clothing but in an anti-consumerist way. These concepts of individual expression and mirror led us to the idea of symmetry; through an abstract form, which is constantly repeated both i the eye makeup of the Fecal Matter looks and the cuts of their clothes, we took out new shapes and forms.

Radical forms, post-human figures, and the most seen colors in their identity form part of the created visual system.


w/: Eliot de Tienda, Sara Miravete, Laia Hernando, Oscar Bonet and Veronika Gryshchuk

Flexible visual system