About the artist
Maxim Wakultschik (born 1973 in Minsk, Belarus) is a multidisciplinary artist who challenges sensory perception and uses alienation as an artistic tool. He has lived and worked in Düsseldorf since the 1990s, where he completed his studies at the renowned Kunstakademie Düsseldorf. His work moves at the intersection of visual art, design and technology, with a strong fascination for light, perception and identity.
Wakultschik is best known for his hyper-detailed portraits and optical illusions, in which he uses unusual materials such as wooden rods, mirror fragments, acrylic glass or laser-cut shapes. From a distance, his works appear photographic or almost digital, but up close they reveal a complex, artisanal construction of hundreds of elements. This layering makes his work intriguing: it literally and figuratively moves between reality and abstraction, between distance and intimacy.
A recurring theme in Wakultschik’s oeuvre is the face – not as an individual representation, but as an archetype, mirror and projection surface. His portraits are rarely immediately recognizable. They seem to elude clarity, as if they are constantly recomposing themselves depending on the position of the viewer and the incidence of light. In this respect, his work is in line with the philosophical tradition of subjective perception – art that does not tell us what to see, but asks: what do you actually see?
In addition to his portrait series, Wakultschik has also developed geometric-abstract work in which he plays with optical effects, often with a meditative or almost spiritual dimension. These works can be read as contemporary mandalas or digital rosettes – a subtle fusion of craftsmanship and aesthetic refinement.
His work has been exhibited internationally in museums, galleries and art fairs from Miami to Basel, from Seoul to Paris. What sets Wakultschik apart is his ability to balance craftsmanship, concept and sensory experience. In an era in which visual culture is fleeting, he invites the viewer to slowness, observation and wonder.



















































