"Maya"

audio guide

The sculpture "Maya" by Ivan Bodnar is a 3.6-meter-tall wrought iron figure, embodied in a style that combines modern metal sculpture with the symbolic codes of ancient cultures. The author has embedded a multilayered content in the work, where each element of form and ornament works as a carrier of historical and cultural memory.

The silhouette of "Maya" is built according to the canons of a female anthropomorphic figure with an emphasis on symbolic zones - chest, stomach, hips. The body of the sculpture seems to be wrapped in relief spiral lines, which create the effect of dynamics. The lines are not painted, they are voluminous and forged, which gives the work a feeling of "living" texture.

The sculpture "Maya" directly appeals to the traditions of the Trypillian culture (4th–3rd millennium BC), in particular to the plasticity of small clay figurines found by archaeologists in settlements. Hence the characteristic terracotta palette and ornamental motifs. At the same time, the image fits into the archetype of the Great Mother Goddess, common to many Indo-European cultures, embodying the feminine as a source of life, protection and harmony.

Sculpture is like a bridge between Trypillya and modern Ukraine, between an archaeological artifact and living art. Ivan Bodnar reinterprets this heritage, preserving key signs but presenting them in a modern, technologically advanced form. "Maya" becomes not only a reconstruction of an archaic image, but also an author's commentary on the continuity of cultural memory.

“Майя” – Зображення 8
Ivan Bodnar
A blacksmith made of fire, metal and faith in victory