Adrian Sutton Gallery is delighted to present new works by Emilija Radojičić (b. 1989, Belgrade). For this exhibition entitled SKLAD — translated as "harmony" or "unison" — the Serbian artist presents a wool work alongside a site-specific wall installation, both rooted in the geometric vocabulary of traditional Serbian Pirot kilims, which she reinterprets into vibrant and tactile forms.
Weaving together cultural memory, personal experience, and the quiet rhythms of the natural world, her work reflects an ongoing search for balance — one that brings forth emotions, energies, and elements drawn from both personal and collective experience. Playful shapes and bold colours, reminiscent of modernist aesthetics, give form to this inner landscape.
Radojičić approaches her practice as a process of inner renewal, guided by intuition rather than intention. "I guide myself by intuition and feelings at that moment. I usually don't think about anything in particular — something like meditation," she explains. Like images surfacing from deep within, her works emerge from a space between the personal and the collective unconscious — abstract expressions of mood, feeling, and atmosphere, at once intimate and universal.
