Somewhere between a surreal daydream and your childhood stop-motion VHS collection lives the fantastical world of Anastasiya Kraynyuk.
A Serbian digital sorceress of sorts, Kraynyuk crafts visual concoctions that feel like they were pinched and prodded into existence by mischievous clay elves.

Her artwork bubbles with strange familiarity—rubbery, globby characters that seem equal parts charming and unsettling.
Think Wallace and Gromit after an espresso-fueled semester at art school. Textures are so tangibly bizarre you’ll want to poke your screen to make sure it’s not squishy.

Kraynyuk’s curious aesthetic has caught the eyes of The New York Times, Zeit Campus, and Vinyl Moon, who were presumably drawn in by her delightful weirdness.
And when the digital canvas isn’t enough, she 3D prints her strange little universes into the real world—bringing her gooey dreams to physical life.

Dive deeper into her technicolor rabbit hole via her website or lurk joyfully through her Instagram. It’s like claymation, but make it psychedelic.
Images © Copyright Anastasiya Kraynyuk.











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