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How does land remember? What is revealed in the erosion of borders? And what remains when history is silenced?

These are the questions Daniele Balsyte asks as she explores land not as a passive backdrop, but as both a silent archive and an active presence—one that carries the weight of time, migration, and colonial history in ways often unseen.

Through abstraction and poetic minimalism, Balsyte maps landscapes shaped not by human hands, but by the slow, steady forces of nature. Worn surfaces, fractured lines, and quiet imprints speak of extraction, displacement, and the remnants of histories that refuse to disappear. In her work, the land does not simply endure—it remembers.









Work in progress