top of page
Ville Kylätasku
(b. 1979)
Lives and works in Berlin
An internationally recognized
artist whose work rejects the self-referential inwardness often
associated with contemporary art. Informed by his adolescent
years in classical ballet and contemporary circus, Kylätasku
engages boldly with human and metaphysical themes,
approaching life and art with passion and sincere curiosity.
Working in oil, Kylätasku builds layered, contemplative surfaces
that navigate the spaces between abstraction and
representation, landscape and psyche. Rooted in the European
visual tradition, his work explores transience, belonging, and
spatial poetics. Often beginning with digital collages of imagery
from classical painting, fashion, and architecture, he layers and
erases to create works that resist quick interpretation yet invite
sustained engagement.
A tension between precision and spontaneity runs through his
practice, shaped by Northern light, seasonal rhythms, and the
psychological resonance of landscapes. Rather than depict
specific places, he conjures atmospheric fields of memory
influenced by his wish for a “new Renaissance” —topographies
filtered through perception, emotion, and time.
Exhibited with Barvinskyi at

bottom of page





