MAJÁK COLLECTION
MAJAK COLLECTION
Maják is a Slovakian non-profit residency tending to individuals with deafblindness. For 15 years, the organisation has been conducting art workshops for its residents to help alleviate their distress. Through the language of art, they speak to us, sharing stories woven from the threads of silence and darkness.
These artists, despite their limitations, demonstrate how conquering life's hardships can result in impressive outcomes and gorgeous artworks. Their paintings are not just visual delights; they are the heartbeats of souls that have found their voice through the medium of art.
By supporting Maják, you become part of a movement that celebrates the triumph of the human spirit over adversity. Your patronage not only shines a light on the extraordinary talents of our artists but also helps sustain the workshops that nurture their creativity.
FEATURED ARTISTS
FEATURED ARTISTS
PETER HRUKA
34-year-old Peter is one of Maják's most reserved residents. While not one to show much emotion, Peter still has a deep attachment with Maják, the place he calls home.
A man of few words, Peter always plans his schedule marked by pictures. He loves his art therapy sessions and can't help but enjoy outdoor activities such as visits to nature, walking in galleries, and horse-riding. He can be found watching comedy TV, doing simple math, and playing games in his free time. Despite, or perhaps because of, his visual and auditory impairment, he is bestowed with a good memory that can memorize his experience through an imaginative perception of the outer world. Such a gift is expressed in several creations of his.
KRISTÍNA FAUNGOVÁ (KIKA)
When 33-year-old Kika moved to Maják, it quickly became her second home. An expressive resident communicates with others not only through a wide range of signs and symbols but also with not-to-be-missed facial expressions. She loves social and leisure activities, after which she often relishes a small cake and coffee.
Watching TV with flashing colours and images also fascinate her. A keen painter, Kika can easily get lost in her emotions during art therapy sessions. The texture, reflections, and contact with canvas provide her with serenity as well as aesthetic simulation. Colours are her signature traits, which appear throughout all her creations. A radical painter paints the whole body: she needs to have colours throughout the body to feel the stimulation flowing around her. She considers this a cleansing ritual that peels off her mask to show her true self.
JURAJ BALÁ
Born in Shina in 1980, Juraj describes himself as a loner who his parents abandoned. His poor eyesight prevented him from learning to paint. But when coming to Maják, he finally found a place to think, relax, and be with himself. A self-aware resident, he can't help but describe how his deteriorating tunnel vision and auditory impairment hindered him to always seek help from outside. He prefers using sign language to communicate, despite his frequent struggle to understand it. Despite his emotionally explosive and stubborn nature, he is a caring, protective and charitable person. He can often be found helping others walk, play or eat, and donating artworks that he made. His favourite hobbies include watching action movies and sports, especially football. Despite his auditory impairment, he has music in him and can be frequently found dancing around to his own tune.
His caring, music-loving, and scholarly curious personalities are expressed through his spiritual canvas depicting his work with themes of nature and protective figures.
MARTIN KOVALÍK
Martin arrived at Maják with auditory and visual impairment, because of which he can only hear white noise and suffers from extremely blurry vision. Such difficulties render nonverbal communication a struggle for him. To make things worse, he can also not properly move his hands and knees, making it difficult to independently engage in everyday activities. Regardless, Martin maintains his dry sense of humour, often using it to make jokes rendering his peers and caretakers dumbfounded. He can also be seen cooking and spending time feeding and playing with cats, which he considers his friends. An intelligent person, he loves to write, through which he possesses a wide range of vocabulary. .
However, nothing interests him more than the ultimate intellectual game: chess. He also gleefully participates in travelling, talking to a lot of people and doing home chores. Disheartened by the abandonment and abuse Martin has experienced throughout his life, Martin often ponders over his existence: asking important questions, others may not be so ready to.
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