This ceramic triptych is a reference to Andrei Tarkovsky's film "Andrei Rublev," filled with symbols, relief, and silence. Here, the boy is not just a child. He is a saint. Or one who will become one.
Three panels, combined into a single cycle, resemble stills from a film: each is framed by a black, jagged frame, like film stock—a reminder that this is not a static image, but movement, history, a test of faith.
At the center of each panel is the silhouette of a boy with a halo above his head. His face is pensive, almost sad. As if he already knows what awaits him ahead—pain, doubt, creativity, silence. Each panel depicts the boy's head at a different angle: on the left, he looks forward, in the center, to the side, and on the right, down. Like three stages of a journey: faith → doubt → acceptance. Like three frames from the life of an artist who hasn't yet become Rublev—but already feels he should be.
A restrained, earthy, aged color palette like ancient frescoes, like a worn manuscript, like a memory of the past.
This item is available to order. To place an order, please fill out the form or contact us. Make an order