Marta Vosyliūtė's personal exhibition "When expensive becomes cheap, when cheap becomes expensive" opens.
*When it comes to a flat base on which goods are placed and transported, the word pallet should not be used in this sense. This is a pallet, if we are talking about a wooden product that meets European standards.
Euro pallets have become pallets connecting entire countries, when you buy from us - please, you get. Some people cut them for firewood, others made terraces and furniture. Maximos sometimes threw them away, sometimes distributed them and distributed them. A whole shadow network of Euro pallets has appeared - we give / pick up today; I sell for 5 euros, I have 18 pieces; unused pallets for sale (which is a lie, because at least once they have served parcels and shippers). I caught everyone like a gem for several years around my village, because I was an atypical European - I didn't have a car and all my friends lived outside of here. And only a rediscovered friend from the childhood swing brought the abandoned ones from the nearest big city several times, and a few more - agreed-upon vagrants. The gazebo from cheap materials has become a gem. WHEN CHEAP BECOME EXPENSIVE.
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In the exhibition, next to the photos, a video film WHEN EXPENSIVE BECOME CHEAP is shown, in which modern dance sings and grounds the "First Swallows" of Mykonos. Only our swallow - an influencer - did not participate in the Vilnius performance festival, because it would have excited the audience too much with an erotic dance.
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Everything is laid out on a tray, just take it, remake it, use it and create it.
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Marta Vosyliūtė completed her art studies at the M. K. Čiurlionis Arts Gymnasium, then at the Vilnius Art Academy. Participates in various exhibitions, but already knows that the best exhibition is a personal one. He is interested in various techniques, non-traditional spaces, creates performances decorations, video works, tapo, writes texts on the topics of cultural criticism. This exhibition matured as a critique of hipsters who did not know how their grandparents' generations used to sort farm items, waste for recycling. Because people who have forgotten their roots already need sustainability camps, workshops and applications for unnecessary projects in a country that has no oil.
But maybe it's good that ambition drives the younger generation forward. Because everything is placed on a pallet.