Welcome

I am Kinga Blanka.

I create stories, photographs, and artworks inspired by memory, animals, imperfection, impermanence, and the beauty hidden in ordinary life that shape life.

Why Memory?

Because ordinary moments become meaningful only after time has passed.

Why do I create?

I create because I feel a natural and persistent need to create. Some people move through life by observing it from a distance;

I understand life by transforming it into stories, images, reflections, and memories. Creating is not something I force myself to do — it is simply the most natural way for me to exist and make sense of the world.

Why animals?

Throughout my childhood, animals were often my closest and most genuine companions. Their loyalty, honesty, and quiet emotional presence shaped the way I see life and human relationships. Animals became not only friends, but also silent witnesses to memory, loneliness, comfort, and joy. Even today, they remain at the emotional center of much of my work.

Why memory?

By nature, I am a deeply reflective person. I believe life loses much of its meaning if we move through it without reflection. Memory allows ordinary moments to gain emotional weight over time. Many of the moments that appear insignificant while they happen later become the moments that define us. My work often explores this quiet transformation of experience into meaning.

Why Wabi-Sabi?

I am drawn to Wabi-Sabi because I find beauty in imperfection, aging, irregularity, and incompleteness. Perfect forms often feel distant to me, while imperfect things feel alive, honest, and human. Wabi-Sabi reflects the way I see both art and life — fragile, temporary, unfinished, yet deeply beautiful because of it.

Why bilingual work?

Polish is my native language, but English became part of my artistic journey through curiosity and aspiration. I always wanted to speak and express myself fluently in English because it allowed me to reach beyond one culture and communicate with a wider world. Working bilingually also reflects my inner experience — living between languages, perspectives, and emotional nuances that sometimes exist more naturally in one language than the other.

Waiting for the Tide

The beach was quiet this morning. The buoy survived another summer. I thought about if memory works the same way…