Hi there!

To begin with, I am very happy to be part of this unique project.

Even before the start of the working process, the title Silence initially attracted me. I realized immediately that it would be a very interesting, unusual, and profound installation, which it turned out to be, indeed. When I first saw the garden, I wanted to stay there for a long time, such a pleasant place it was, a place reigned by harmony and peace.

While preparing to conduct mediation sessions, I reflected on what I was going to talk about, what questions to ask, etc. But before starting a dialogue with visitors, it was necessary to understand what this place meant to me. In my mind, Paweł Althamer's garden is associated with ancient Greek gardens—places for solitude, philosophical contemplation, and conversations. In modern realities, the artist's installation seemed to be an island of peacefulness, where one could escape from the bustling metropolis to relax, gain strength and energy, and stay alone with oneself.

The first mediations were a little exciting. Even though I had some previous experience of such practices, this project entailed its own nuances and specifics. The first of them was that the installation was located outside, in Gorky Park, which is why the audience was very diverse, often completely unprepared for such an experience. Nevertheless, most of our garden’s guests were open to communication and had a positive attitude, which made me very happy. Sometimes a person did not have time to stay longer, and I could only briefly inform them about our wonderful project. But the most pleasant moments of my work were the moments of lengthy and thoughtful conversations with visitors about art—and this was genuine mediation.

Summing up, I want to say that it was an amazing experience, useful both for the installation's visitors and me. Over the course of the project, I began to understand better the psychology of visitors who came to the museum—what they want to see, what they are ready to discuss, and what thoughts contemporary art invokes in them. I’ve also had a very pleasant time at Silence.