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Gallery 05
BIEAF2025 - The Lost Center
World Artist Invitation Exhibition
BIEAF Steering Committee announces BIEAF2025 participants. 641 artists were selected from 80 countries. The online exhibition will run from September 10, 2025 to February 28, 2026. During this period, offline exhibitions will be held at various galleries in Busan.
Gallery 01 Artists and Works Slide * You can mark hearts on your favorite artists and works.

BIEAF2025 Invited Artist
Cyrine Azouz Saffar
Tunisia
A quiet memory lies deep within, between dream and awareness, between inner chaos and a steady gaze. Two female portraits mirror each other in a vibrant dance of spirals and circular patterns, blending together in a burst of bright colors. They reflect the richness of thoughts, emotions, memories, and dreams. One has her eyes closed in silent meditation, the other looks straight into the soul of the viewer. Their faces stay calm and still, while the world moves around them.
I am a painter and art teacher, graduated from the Higher Institute of Fine Arts of Tunis. My work explores the inner self, blending dream and consciousness through intuitive, symbolic, and textured images inspired by the sacred feminine and emotional vibrations.


ntrospection
54/65, Acrylic on canvas and mixed techniques, 2025


BIEAF2025 Invited Artist
Czibor Éva
Hungary
My work, The Wound, is made of glass, using the melting technique. The shape refers to a wing or a plant fruit. The glass broke during cooling. I glued the break and wrapped it with woven iron mesh. The iron mesh protects the wound like a Band-Aid. Glass means the present time to me. The internal structure of this material is the expression of constant movement and transformation in the here and now. The wound refers to the break in continuity, which can no longer be erased, but rather needs to be highlighted and drawn to attention.
I graduated from the Hungarian University of Fine Arts in 1990. I work with stone and glass. I have several public works. I have participated in many exhibitions. I teach art history, stone carving, visual culture.



Wound
Glass, iron150cmx60cmx20cm, 2023


BIEAF2025 Invited Artist
Daiva Kupstienė
Lithuania
Contemporary art increasingly operates without a clear center – without a single direction, without a unified language. This is a response to a world in which everything becomes temporary, fragile, fragmented. Art in a crisis is no longer just a search for beauty or harmony – it is a way to reflect anxiety, uncertainty, confusion. A missing center does not mean emptiness – it is an invitation to search anew for meaning where it seems to have disappeared.
I was born in 1970, in Kaunas, Lithuania. I started drawing when I was a child. I got interested in art at school. I finished Antanas Martinaitis art school. My first painting teacher was Antanas Obcarskas. I have been participating in exhibitions since 2009. I presented four personal exhibitions and participated in more than 60 group exhibitions. I organized symposiums in Lithuania and Sweden, also I have organized two international symposiums in Lithuania. I have participated in international symposiums in India and Italy. I have participated in international exhibitions in Poland, Greece, India, Turkey, Iran, India, South Korea and Italy. I have organized exhibitions in Lithuania and England for charity to help children with cancer. I am studying at Kaunas University, Faculty of Arts and Education, Academy of Arts, in the second year of the object art study program. To me art is refreshing, and it is a big part of my life.

Seven laws of the wolf
Oil on cancas /100 x 70 cm / 2025
This painting intertwines allegory, symbolism and surreal tension. A huge wolf face, protruding from the vastness of the sky, watches over the playing field – a chessboard, where the figures transform into animal creatures. Anthropomorphized animals, having assumed the roles of rulers, knights and pawns, acquire dramatic and conflictual tension, as if reflecting human internal struggles or social games. The wolf here is not only a symbol of power or threat, but also a judge, observing compliance with the rules of the “game”. The composition reminds us that even orderly structures (the chessboard) can be a scene of chaos and instinct. The image, balancing between reality and dream, invites the viewer to reflect on power relations, control, danger and moral choice.


BIEAF2025 Invited Artist
Dalia Ortega
Mexico
Donna Haraway’s ideas, especially those from her seminal work "A Cyborg Manifesto", intertwine with ecofeminism in intriguing ways, influencing the production of my work. I think this is quite close to the main idea of the exhibition, gathering a clear consern about ecological issues, in my case the Pollution of the Gulf of Mexico waters due to oil spills.
Dalia Ortega is a visual artist from Zapotlán el Grande, Jalisco. She earned her Bachelor's degree in Visual Arts from the University of Guadalajara and her Master’s degree in Visual Arts with a specialization in painting from the National Autonomous University of Mexico (UNAM). Her work has been recognized with an Honorable Mention at the 14th Ibero- American Biennial Puebla de los Ángeles 2023 and selected for the Second Tijuana International Pictorial Triennial 2024, the Olga Costa National Painting Biennial 2024, the Joaquín Clausell National Painting Biennial in 2023 and 2017, the Alfredo Zalce National Painting Biennial 2022, the Ángel Zárraga National Painting Award 2022, the Lanzarote International Art Festival 2019, and the UNAM National Visual Arts Biennial 2016, among others. Her paintings have also been exhibited in Mexico and abroad, and she received the Jorge Martínez Painting Award from the Municipality of Guadalajara, Jalisco, in 2012.

GAIA
Acrylic skin and charcoal
"Gaia" is a metaphor for the living Earth, the thin spherical layer of soil and water that exists between the planet’s incandescent interior and the upper atmosphere. This moving tissue of living organisms is thus represented by a malleable pictorial layer that forms a skin—made of acrylic material—but also metaphorically, Gaia’s skin. Intervened with abstract gestures and charcoal, the free-form composition resembles oil spills invading the sea, symbolizing the irruption of evil, of pollution upon the purity of the surface. The piece reflects on the effects of human actions on the Earth due to the improper use of resources and the environmental impact, opening perspectives toward a more conscious and compassionate future course of action.


BIEAF2025 Invited Artist
Damara Alif
Indonesia
I believe the BIEAF2025 event, “The Lost Center – Art in Crisis,” is not only important, but deeply necessary in these challenging times. Its presence feels urgent—like a collective calling for reflection, healing, and transformation through art.
I sincerely hope that the works presented by the participating artists will radiate as waves of positive energy, resonating far and wide—across minds, hearts, and even the corners of the universe.
Our Earth, this fragile home we share, is in need of our care more than ever. It calls for our attention, our compassion, and our commitment to restore balance and beauty to the spaces we inhabit. Through this gathering of creative souls, may we rediscover our connection— not just to art, but to each other, and to the living world that breathes with us.
Since I was a child, I've found joy in drawing—it has always been my way of expressing the world around me. To me, this world is a constant wonder, full of mysteries that never cease to amaze. As time passes, I've come to deeply realize how interconnected we are—with each other, with nature, and with the vast universe that holds us. Everything we do echoes beyond ourselves, affecting the world in seen and unseen ways. Lately, I’ve felt a calling to focus my creative work on themes of the universe— exploring both its spiritual essence and its social reflections. Through the visual stories I create, I hope to invite others to pause, reflect, and reconnect— with nature, with their inner selves, and with the shared existence we often take for granted. Because nature is not separate from us. We are a part of it— And it, a part of us.

RWA BHINEDA
Digital Illustration/A2/2025
In this work, a Cyborg Buddha emerges as a contemplative figure—embodying a civilization where spirituality and technology have seamlessly merged. He sits in stillness, not upon a golden throne, but embraced by the forest, accompanied by small woodland spirits inspired by the Kodama from Princess Mononoke—silent guardians and manifestations of nature’s purity and harmony. These beings are not mere visual ornaments; they represent ancient souls still lingering in a hypermodern world. They serve as quiet reminders that amidst the roar of machinery and the glow of artificial lights, there remains a natural rhythm we must not forget. The title RWA BHINEDA—a Balinese term meaning “two that are different but remain one”—is the philosophical anchor of this piece. Here, good and evil are not opposing forces meant to cancel each other out, but dualities that complete one another. Humanity, nature, and technology are not adversaries locked in struggle, but siblings intertwined in a greater cycle of life. Inspired by Ashitaka’s words in Princess Mononoke, the piece invites us to see with eyes unclouded by hate—to recognize the light within darkness, and the shadow within light. Balance is not a final destination, but a living, breathing process that must be constantly nurtured. Through this poster, I invite viewers to step into a utopian realm—not as an escape from reality, but as a mirror: a reflection of what could be, if we choose to listen again—to the whispers of the forest, the voice of the soul, and the rhythm of machines as one unified song. Co-exist.


BIEAF2025 Invited Artist
Daniela Rum
Italia

I began as a self-taught artist in 2013. I later attended an illustration school and took part in several workshops to explore other techniques. In 2017, I discovered the technique of soft pastels. Since 2019, I have served as Vice President of PASIT (Pastellisti Italiani), the Italian National Association of Soft Pastel Artists.

Metamorphosis
Soft Pastel su carta Pastelmat / 32x41cm / 2025
This is my first work entirely conceived and created by me, from study to completion. It is the result of a deep intuition, grown in silence, between light and shadow, like a rite. The butterfly that rests lightly, the hand that offers, the pomegranate that holds life — everything speaks of transformation. Of what changes in form, but not in essence. Of what is offered in truth, after having crossed the darkness. It is my sacred gesture. It is my rebirth.


BIEAF2025 Invited Artist
Dan Zhang
China


球型世界
视频 不限 2022


The shadow of the forest
Métal 30cm sur 15cm 2026


BIEAF2025 Invited Artist
DAYE WON
Korea
모든 사람에게는 사실 두 번의 삶이 있다. 그리고 두 번째 삶은 단 하나의 삶만 있다 는 걸 깨달았을 때 시작된다. 깨달은 순간 우리는 인생이 다시 시작되고 새로 태어나 게 된다. '인생의 첫 번째 리허설이 인생 그 자체라면 인생에는 과연 무슨 의미가 있을까?' 잠깐 잠에 들 듯이 그 찰나의 순간에 나는 삶의 의미를 깨달았다. 삶의 의미를 깨닫고 내가 원하는 것을 이루기 위해 노력하게 되었다. 감정에 최선을 다 하고 후회 없이 하려 노력해야 한다. 모두가 자기 자신을 품어주고 새로 태어나는 과정을 겪길 바란다.
목원대학교 미술학부 한국화과 학사로 졸업한 후 경희대 일반대학원 미술학과 한국화 전공으로 석사 수료 중에 있습니다. 눈에 보이지 않고 형태가 없는 감정들을 사실 적이고 섬세하지만 어딘가 낯설고 이상한 삶의 풍경, 인무르 대상으로 시각화하는 작업을 하고 있습니다.

품 안에서
장지에 분채,혼합재료 / 90.9cm X 72.7cm / 2024


BIEAF2025 Invited Artist
Dev Chooramun
Mauritius
"The Lost Center" symbolizes a loss of equilibrium between nature and civilization, between spiritual and material, between art and purpose. It's a philosophical crisis, not just ecological art is losing its center just as humans have lost their connection to the Earth.
Graduated from Punjab University, Post Graduated from Mauritius Institute of Education, held 16 solo art exhibition since 1980, participated in several group exhibitions, workshops, residencies in the five continents

Echoes of the Forgotten Center
Acrylic / 100x120cm / 2022
A cry to remember the forgotten center where identity, birth, and nature fragment, yet invite us to reimagine presence, care, and shared becoming.


Pilgrimage of the Dispersed Heart
Acrylic / 62x92cm / 2019
A blue parakeet of human forms stands on tortoises marching to the sea echoing a lost center, where nature, spirit, and civilization seek reunion.
Shell of the Unspoken Memory
Acrylic / 46x53cm / 2011
A cry to remember the forgotten center where identity, birth, and nature fragment, yet invite us to reimagine presence, care, and shared becoming.


BIEAF2025 Invited Artist
Diana Paredes
USA
Diana Paredes is a Fine Artist born in Lima, Peru. Although living in the United States for most of her life her art has been influenced by the rich Latin American Culture. Diana considers her art to be a vessel for healing, healing through form, color and symbol, inviting remembrance of the Divine, therefore creating a dream-like quality in most of her pieces. Throughout the years she has participated in many group as well as Solo Exhibitions and her Art can be found in Private Collections throughout the world.

Bloom from the Mirror Field
Oil on canvas 12"X16" 2021


BIEAF2025 Invited Artist
Dibyasimha Behera
India
BIEAF 2025: "The Lost Center – Art in Crisis" stands as a profound and timely exploration of contemporary art in a world marked by uncertainty, disconnection, and transformation.Far beyond a conventional exhibition, this edition of BIEAF becomes a mirror to our times reflecting the cultural, political, and existential crises shaping both artists and audiences alike.

Dreams
Painting Size-18 x 24 Inches


BIEAF2025 Invited Artist
Diego Holguin
Colombia
The artwork "National Tree of Colombia" is composed of 8 sheets of tempered and duly serialized glass, hand-painted with natural resins. Its base is made of shipwreck wood, a material collected from the beaches of Puerto Colombia. This wood travels along the Magdalena River and is finally drawn in by the waves of the Caribbean Sea. In this work, I represent the wax palm, the national tree of Colombia, which is in danger of extinction. Its majesty, imposing height, and elegant structure are considered one of the most important species in the world due to its ecological and cultural value, and its great importance for the biodiversity of
the entire Andes mountain range in South America.
Diego Holguín holds a Master's degree in Fine Arts, graduating with honors from the Faculty of Fine Arts of the Universidad del Atlántico. Born in Cartago in 1969, he currently resides in Barranquilla, where he has developed a prolific artistic career and a deep connection with the local community. Artistic trajectory Holguín is recognized for his versatility in three-dimensional and twodimensional techniques, especially excelling in glass painting. His "Crystal Forests" series is a notable example, where he represents the fragility of nature through works made of hand-cut crystal and natural resins. In addition, he has created sculptures with driftwood and galvanized steel, and has intervened in public spaces with murals in the Transmetro de Barranquilla stations, paying tribute to figures such as Esthercita Forero and Pacho Galán, among others. Exhibitions and distinctions His work has been exhibited both in Colombia and internationally, including cities such as Paris, Miami, Palma de Mallorca, and Rome. He has participated in events such as the Salón BAT de Arte Popular and has been awarded prizes for innovation by TEBSA in 2015 and 2016. He also won the Stimulus Portfolio of the Secretary of Culture of Barranquilla in 2013. Social and educational work Committed to community development, Holguín has led art workshops in vulnerable communities, promoting techniques such as artistic recycling, painting, and stained glass. He is the coordinator of the project "Transportarte, el arte nos une" (Transportarte, art unites us), which brought art to the Transmetro stations, and has served as a departmental advisor for fine and visual arts of the Atlántico. Contact and networks To learn more about his work, you can visit his official website: www.diegoholguin.com. He is also active on Instagram as @holguindiegoart, where he shares his creations and recent activities

National tree of Colombia
Tempered glass 70x40x16cm 2023


BIEAF2025 Invited Artist
Diego Valentinuzzi
Italia
The naturalistic theme lends itself in particular to my way of painting and my artistic sensitivity, where, observing my works well, you immediately perceive a delineation, an investigation of the living, of a landscape reality in which I am strongly attracted to that escape, where the artist grants his deepest meditations.
Once again the gaze goes on the breadth of the skies, the slow and versed spent spending seasons in a pictorial style always linked to the hard environmental reality; A component can be vital about the expressive form of my works, in which lights and colors are interpreters of inspiring motifs.

History and dream
oil on canvas 100x70 ...2021


BIEAF2025 Invited Artist
DING WENNA
China
Ding Wenna (female), born in 1971 in Hebei Province, graduated from Hebei Normal University in 1992 and has since dedicated herself to ink wash painting. She further pursued studies in ink figure painting at Capital Normal University and the Central Academy of Fine Arts, refining her expertise in this traditional art form. Her career spans over three decades, blending academic training with continuous artistic exploration in Chinese ink aesthetics.

Cerebral Sprint
Xuan paper,ink,and stone colors 84x76cm 2020
This painting portrays the delicate interplay between human reason and emotion, with the intellectual pleasure of thought expressed through rational gray tones, capturing the beauty of balance and movement between the two.



Natural in my self / Forever with time
Oil on canvas / 73x92cm / 2024
People and nature have always been the inspiration for my art. Nature always gives me new ideas. Exploring nature helps me explore myself.


One fine day
oil on canvas 16.5-27cm 2025

One fine day
oil on canvas / 80 * 145cm / 2025

One fine day
oil on canvas 16.5-27cm 2025


BIEAF2025 Invited Artist
Kim DongJa
Korea
우포늪에서 생태 해설사를 한 계기로 우포늪과 벗하며 사진 작업을 합니다. 생명은 근본적으로 나고 자라며 순환하는 것이며 인간 또한 그 순환의 일부임에 집중합니다. 인간이 자연에서 멀어질수록 중심을 잃어가는 것이라 생각합니다.
생이가래라는 수생식물의 포자가 우포늪의 물 위에 만든 무늬를 시각적으로 접근한 연작 중 하나 입니다. 포자는 생이가래가 한 생의 주기를 갈무리 하며 만든 다음 생의 약속이며 작품은 그 약속이 겨울의 바람과 물결을 만나 만들어낸 문양의 기록입니 다. 생명 순환 고리의 중심이자 시작입니다.


Salvinia
digital pigmentprint on artpaper/450x300mm/2019


BIEAF2025 Invited Artist
Dr kusumlata sharma
INDIA
I am dr Kusumlata Sharma artist from Madhya Pradesh i have been working in the field of painting for the last 20 years. In 2019, I was invited to the Russia Art Residency and my paintings were collected in the museum. I have received many international, national and state level awards in the field of painting, in the year 2017 I was awarded a Senior Fellowship by the Government of India. Many of my art exhibitions have been held in all major cities of India including USA, Sweden, China, South Korea, Turkey, Bangladesh etc. In the year 2023, I was invited to the Egypt Symposium. In the year 2025, the Times of India's annual art exhibition which was held in Delhi Mumbai included the art works of well-known artists of the country, my art works were also included in the said exhibition, they were highly appreciated. And were included in the collection of a respectable collector. Currently, I am doing art work along with working in a private college.
My work is my own creativity, my work is a mixture of abstraction and symbols. The fusion style of miniature with nature themes in art has almost always been presented by artists and its depiction can be literal or abstract. Conveying a sense of its depth or perspective remains my main objective. The depiction of nature through art can be used in a special form for better consideration, which is not only a symbol of excellence but also a symbol of curiosity for the unknown. Depictions of nature may also be about intellectual thought and spirituality. I have found nature to play a major role and a source of inspiration for my visual language. I connect with things in nature that are tangible references and use them simply because it's one of the most tactile things. My art is not just an attempt to imitate nature, but also to discover the invisible experiences that are not actually visible in real life and by taking a visual cue from the actual forms of nature by observation and by reflecting on natural phenomena and natural forms. Make his abstract paintings. My paintings incorporate a unique visual vocabulary comprising components of nature, women and culture reflecting their underlying social layers. Form and color acquire a more aesthetic component, open to multiple interpretations, giving simple and artistic meaning to human activity in various roles and activities. In my work abstract art is an experience in which one has to abandon prejudices and ideas and put things into words or visuals, and the artwork gives you a unique experience. Lines, form, color, texture, pattern, structure and process define its formal qualities and the exploration of these formal qualities is the purpose of my art. Dr. Kusumlata Sharma

Untitled
Acrylic ink pastel 22x30 2025


BIEAF2025 Invited Artist
Dr Priya Yabaluri
INDIA
Dr. Priya Yabaluri is an eminent artist in the art world with over 23 years of experience as a professional artist(Doctorate in Fine Arts). Her artworks have gained popularity and respect and have been exhibited in India and overseas. Along with being an artist, she is the founder of the art brand Art for Awareness and the start-up (MSME) organization World Art Fair. She also arranges art events to display the work of both eminent and upcoming artists who have the potential to be successful. For her excellent work in the industry, she earned many national and global awards in 2020–2025. She also publishes art-related magazines and books to promote art culture and artists around the world. She has collaborated with the United Nations (UN75) to conduct awareness programs by organizing art exhibitions that cover social, ecological, global, and cultural issues. Register to participate in BIEAF2025 Period: From June 15th to July 14th Participation fee: None Field: Painting, Sculpture, Photography, Design, Craft, AI works, etc 1
Art has the extraordinary power to ignite our imagination and kindle a sense of responsibility towards our surroundings. Dr. Priya Yabaluri, popularly known as { PY π ) is a distinguished artist with a passion for nature and sustainable living, brings this blend of art and conscience to life through her awe-inspiring "Simple Living Series." Her beautiful and surreal landscapes highlight the essence of simple living, the importance of community, and the urgent need to improve our lives and protect our precious environment. Dr. Priya Yabaluri's paintings are a mesmerizing celebration of simple living and vibrant communities. The focal point of her artworks is a colorful array of homes, neatly nestled amidst nature's splendor. Each painting depicts a surreal landscape where houses seamlessly blend with the surrounding environment, emphasizing the harmony between human life and nature. Beyond the captivating imagery of homes and communities, Dr. Yabaluri's art carries a profound message about the urgent need to improve our lives while preserving nature. Each brushstroke conveys the artist's concern for our environment and the critical importance of sustainable practices. The surreal landscapes in her paintings act as a gentle nudge towards embracing simple living and minimizing our ecological footprint. They remind us of the interconnectedness between our daily lives and the health of our planet. In this fast-paced world, Dr. Yabaluri's art prompts us to reevaluate our choices and find ways to live in harmony with nature.


Simple living
Mixed media


BIEAF2025 Invited Artist
Dr. Jaspal Singh
INDIA
Dr.Jaspals.. participated in International,National and, state level art exhibitions since 1980 Awarded many awards in different art exhibitions Solo and group exhibitions since 1985 / Represented in artists camps, workshops, art Symposium and seminars / Research Papers published in referred art bulletins / Bio-data appeared in Who’s Who in India, Indo Europe, Indo America, Dictionary and directories of Indian artist and artists / Artworks in collection of State Museums, public and private collections in India and Abroad..
My present art work is a graphic print (Titled.. Fertility II.. 12.5 x 20 cms, 2023).. its basically concerned to Fertility as metaphorical concept of germination within all.. Triangle downward is concerned to Earth power and intimate inner strength.. here is dialogue seen among all those things exist on Earth.. Seeds of expansion and growing nature forms are giving colors as major pigment of expansion of life.. a concept of rebirth of lost germination..


Fertility II
Graphic print. 12.5 x 20 cms. 2023.


BIEAF2025 Invited Artist
DR. MAHIMA GUPTA
USA
Dr. Mahima Gupta (USA) is a Guinness World Record Holder, freelance artist, Teacher and a curator. She has a Ph.D. in Drawing & Painting from University of Rajasthan. Jaipur, India. She received University Grants Commission full Fellowship to pursue PHD. Dr. Mahima is a University Topper and Gold Medalist, 1st position in M.A. (Drawing & Painting). Dr. Mahima works in all mediums. Her works were invited to be exhibited in Europe, North America, South America, Australia, the Middle East and Southeast Asia. She has participated in exhibitions in more than 50 countries. Mahima has been a Jury/Judge at many international art exhibitions in Bangladesh, Azerbaijan, Argentina, Australia, Ecuador, Cuba, Peru & India. She has curated and organized many international art exhibitions. She has received many awards from National and International art exhibitions. Her artworks & articles have been published in many international art magazines, journals, books and book covers.



The Lost Center–Spectrum of Disarray
Digital Art/A1/2025
The Lost Center–Bold Geometry
Digital Art/A1/2025
My poster distills the theme of The Lost Center into a striking, graphic composition. My poster is divided into clean quadrants of solid, unblended color—red, blue, green, and orange—representing competing forces, emotions, or fragmented perspectives. At the heart lies a bright yellow circle, boldly outlined in black, symbolizing a missing or obscured core that once unified these divisions. Radiating from the center are broken black rings, sharp and deliberate, that convey a sense of tension and interrupted flow. The use of flat, saturated color and stark contrast draws inspiration from midcentury modernism and Bauhaus principles, giving the piece a retro yet timeless intensity. This version of The Lost Center is not quiet—it confronts disconnection through bold lines and color blocks, demanding attention and reflection on the forces that separate us from our personal or collective essence. My poster invites viewers to reflect on their own “lost centers” and the journey to rediscover meaning, wholeness, or stillness amidst chaos. The use of pure, unblended colors reinforces a return to essentials—form, emotion, truth— while the precise geometry alludes to order longed for, but just out of reach.


BIEAF2025 Invited Artist
Dr. Meena Baya
India
Ina time of globle imbalance and disconnection, The Lost Centre invites artists to respond through the universal language of art. This exhibition is a timelyreflection on the crisis we face - within ourselves, our environment and our culture. It offers a space to reconnect , reflect and raise awareness through creative expression.
Wishing BIEAF2025 a successful and inspiring journey ahead.
Dr Meena Baya, resident of Udaipur Rajasthan, academician, ex principal govt. M.G.college Udaipur, painter and printmaker, has been practicing art since last four decades. She has been showcased her art in prestigious art galleries in India and abroad. More than one dozen solo shows and around fifty group shows have been displayed which some are as follows. Lalit kala Academy Jaipur, Delhi, Punjab and Kerala, British council New Delhi, Jahangir art gallery, Nehru Center, Cymroza art gallery and N.C.P.A Mumbai, Birla Academy of art and culture , Kolkata, Karnataka Chitrakala parishad, Bangalore, Bharat Bhavan, Bhopal, M.S. University Baroda, Contemporary art gallery,Ahemdabad, Lucknow and Himachal. Internationally, she has exhibited her art in U.S.A, U.K, New Zealand, Bhutan, Japan, Holland, Germany . She has been participated in various state, national and international level camps, workshops etc. Her collection of art can be viewed in India and abroad. Some of the awards she has been honored by are 1988, 2015 and 2020 Raj kala puraskar by Rajasthan Lalit Kala Academy, Jaipur. 2015- First Award by ‘WE’ A Group of Indian Contemporary women Artist Chandigarh, 2000 to 2002-Junior Fellowship for two years for the printmaking by ministry of culture, govt. of india, New Delhi, 1993- Research grant for the printmaking by National Lalit Kala Academy, New Delhi ,1996- Fellowship for the printmaking by British council New Delhi and Art Council of Wales, U.K. At present freelancer.

Echoes of The Lost Centre
Acrylic on Canvas / 36x38 inches/ 2024
A frightened man and pigeons scatter in opposite directions-- fleeing fear, the other instinct. The red backdrop burns with urgency, symbolizing a world out of balance. By disturbibg nature , man has lost his path, his centre. Thia painting captures the crisis of The Lost Centre-- where ia broken, and survival turns into silent panic.

Gallery 06
BIEAF2025 - The Lost Center
World Artist Invitation Exhibition
BIEAF Steering Committee announces BIEAF2025 participants. 641 artists were selected from 80 countries. The online exhibition will run from September 10, 2025 to February 28, 2026. During this period, offline exhibitions will be held at various galleries in Busan.
Gallery 01 Artists and Works Slide * You can mark hearts on your favorite artists and works.

BIEAF2025 Invited Artist
Dr. Shubhra Nag
India
My practice as an educator and researcher in aesthetics has long been
anchored in exploring the transformative power of form—how materials,
memory, and meaning converge in the visual language of painting. At the core of my recent inquiries is the alchemy of forms: a sensorial process where the intuitive and the symbolic meet, drawing from both lived experience and layered tradition.
This alchemy becomes especially potent when situated within the visual
grammar of Baramasa—the poetic and seasonal cycle that has shaped India’s vernacular imagination for centuries. My work traces how the cyclical moods of Baramasa continue to inform contemporary painting practices, allowing artists to evoke not only temporal shifts but emotional landscapes rooted in nature, longing, and continuity.
Rather than looking outward to digital technologies, my current focus looks inward—to the phenomenology of making, to the gestures that resist mechanization, and to the tactile presence of pigment, texture, and surface. In my paintings, form is not merely aesthetic but mnemonic; it holds the capacity to recall, reshape, and re-situate memory within the present. It also serves as a gentle conduit for mindfulness and calmness, offering viewers moments of quiet contemplation amid the rush of contemporary life.
At BIEAF 2025, I hope to share this journey of form as transformation—where painting is not a static image but a living terrain of time, culture, and affect. It is in these interstices between craft, emotion, and visual poetics that new vocabularies of contemporary Indian art can emerge, grounded yet expansive.
Dr. Shubhra Nag is a New Delhi-based visual artist and art educator whose interdisciplinary practice delves into the complex intersections of environment, culture, and identity. A gold medallist in both BFA and MFA in Creative Painting and a Doctorate in Visual Arts from Banaras Hindu University, she merges technical mastery with philosophical exploration to create art that resonates on multiple levels. Her artistic journey expanded internationally through training in Chinese figure painting at the China International Academy of Art in Hangzhou, under Chinese government scholarship. This unique blend of Indian and Eastern aesthetic philosophies shapes her visual language, infusing her work with fluid brushwork, earthy palettes, and layered textures that evoke spaces of contemplation and refuge. Over two decades, Dr. Nag has explored themes of ecological imbalance, cultural displacement, and humanity’s fragile connection to nature and heritage. Her recent series, Alchemy of Forms, investigates the delicate balance between form and emptiness, presence and absence, reflecting a search for stillness and orientation amid modern chaos. Her art has been showcased in solo exhibitions like AnnandaRasaVaichitram (2023) and in more than fifty national and international exhibitions. Her works are held in esteemed collections, including Zhejiang University in China, Lalit Kala Akademi in New Delhi, SCZCC in Nagpur, and Ram Chhatpar Shilpanyas in Varanasi, underscoring her significant presence in the contemporary art landscape. As an accomplished art historian and UGC-recognized scholar, Dr. Nag contributes actively to discourse on environmental aesthetics, digital innovation in art, and the reinterpretation of traditional iconography. For Dr. Nag, art is both resistance and hope—a pathway back to balance, orientation, and shared humanity. In an era marked by fragmentation, her work stands as a quiet yet powerful act of connection and renewal.



Alchemy of Forms
Acrylic on Canvas/90 x 90cms./2025
Description of Artworks – Dr. Shubhra Nag In her body of work titled Alchemy of Forms, Dr. Shubhra Nag navigates the existential questions posed by “The Lost Center,” interrogating how modern humanity, driven by relentless acceleration and digital immersion, has drifted from the core of balance, connection, and spiritual stillness. Through thirty paintings and a video installation, her art becomes both a diagnosis of this crisis and a quiet offering of renewal. Dr. Nag’s canvases are characterized by fluid brushwork and earthy palettes rooted in Indian and Chinese aesthetics. She employs acrylics, graphite, and watercolour to build layered compositions where form and void exist in constant dialogue. These works are not merely images but spaces of contemplation, evoking landscapes that feel both familiar and intangible. The surfaces ripple with movement, as if charting unseen currents beneath the surface of life. Themes of silence and presence run through the series. Her concept of “Silent Communication” emerges visually in delicate marks, translucent washes, and restrained gestures that invite viewers into a private dialogue. These are paintings that refuse noise, urging viewers to slow down, reflect, and rediscover an inner center amidst external chaos. The environmental crisis is subtly woven into her work. Natural forms— branches, ripples, drifting petals—appear and dissolve within the compositions, hinting at the fragility of ecosystems and the interconnectedness of all existence. Her palette echoes soil, stone, and mist, grounding the viewer while simultaneously evoking impermanence. Complementing the paintings, Dr. Nag’s video installation extends this exploration into time and space. Slow transitions of organic shapes and shifting colours unfold rhythmically, suggesting cycles of loss and renewal. The video acts as a meditation, a temporal space where viewers can linger and recalibrate their own inner rhythms. It reflects on the disjunction between human pace and nature’s pace—a core concern in an era of environmental and cultural upheaval. Ultimately, Alchemy of Forms is an aesthetic and philosophical response to the festival’s theme. Dr. Nag’s work does not deny the crises of climate change, cultural fragmentation, or digital disconnection; rather, it insists that even amidst disorientation, art can offer pathways toward balance and hope. Her practice is a gentle but firm act of resistance, reclaiming spaces for silence, slowness, and attentive seeing. Each artwork in the series becomes an invitation: to listen more deeply, to observe more mindfully, and to rediscover the lost center within ourselves and our collective humanity. In this way, Dr. Nag’s Alchemy of Forms contributes powerfully to the dialogue on art’s role in navigating—and healing—a world in crisis.


BIEAF2025 Invited Artist
Dr. Vandana Malhotra
India
In a world where concrete outweighs green, the hush of shade beneath trees offers calm on days the sun burns loud. Proof that solutions bloom around us—if only we dare to notice. Under the shadow remind us we need the trees on our Mother Earth they give us calm , peace and helping and healing for today rush life . I used b

Under the shadow
Water colours on paper/38x58cm/2024


BIEAF2025 Invited Artist
Yu duk chul
Korea
우리나라 백두대간을 다니며 현장에 그림으로 그리고 있다. 전국의 산을 산책하다 발길이 머무는 곳이면 어디든지 그림을 그린다. 수년째 등산하고 대두대간 숲속에서 그림을 그리는 작업을 해오다 보니, 한국의 자연미와 기운을그림에 담을 수 있고 나 자신 심신의 조화를 이뤄 더욱 건강해진 듯하다. 그림 또한 수묵으로 일필휘지 생명감을 표현하니 기운 생동하다.
우리나라의 백두대간을 수묵화로 일필휘지 선으로 표현했다. "백두대간"은 한반도의 주산(主山) 줄기, 즉 한반도의 주요 산맥계를 이루는 산줄기를 말한다. 백두산에 서 시작해 지리산까지 이어지는 약 1,400km의 산줄기로, 우리나라 산맥 체계에서 가장 중심이 되는 개념으로 이 그림은 수묵화로 일필휘지 선으로 설악산을 표현했 다.
