Stela Vasileva’s Construction Time is her first solo exhibition in Turkey, and the artist approaches construction as a phenomenon that goes far beyond a simple practice. Through a selection of drawings on paper and installations made of glass and iron, Vasileva examines the concept of construction as a perceptual and conceptual state within the context of seeing and feeling a constantly evolving space. Rather than presenting finished structures, she invites us to experience construction as an open-ended process of discovery by presenting fragments and intermittent moments. Thus, we witness a kind of meditation shaped by space and form on how structures gain meaning. In the heart of Istanbul, a city where cycles of demolition and reconstruction never cease, Construction Time reflects the city’s balance between permanence and transience. In a metropolis where tools and machines, like cranes, shape the daily soundscape, Vasileva’s works frame construction as a state of becoming.
At the heart of Vasileva’s practice is the abstraction of everyday spaces, and the artist draws inspiration from urban spaces such as workshops, storage areas, and construction sites. These spaces are not documented in the literal sense; instead, Vasileva extracts aspects of reality and recontextualizes them in simplified compositions. A staircase, an iron rod, or a figure drawn halfway while in motion is removed from its functional context and depicted within a new dialogue. The artist’s method of isolation and re-visioning gives ordinary materials a different existence. Vasileva erases the explicit narrative, bringing spatial perception to the fore and asking us to think about weight, balance, and intervals rather than a story. What emerges is a visual language that represents objects and figures held in balance, representing states of tension and suspension.
In the paintings, the void and white space are active elements rather than neutral backgrounds, and in Vasileva’s drawings, human figures or tools appear only temporarily and partially. When looking at a bent knee, a torso, a scaffold, or beams, we see these elements captured in their momentary movements and in fragments of objects on large white surfaces. The paper’s empty areas are loaded with meaning and function as structuring intervals that trigger the viewer’s gaze. These empty spaces bring a rhythm, a temporal pause that slows down the gaze. Here, perception emerges through presence and absence. The images will be completed in our minds, and the viewer must participate in constructing the artwork’s meaning. In this way, Vasileva’s use of emptiness is spatial and temporal, and the artist uses these intervals intuitively, allowing emptiness to contain time within the static image.
This sensitivity to intervals is also evident in the installations in the exhibition space, where Vasileva uses glass and iron to create scenes that are both solid and fragile at once. Glass, with its transparency and fragility, is paired with iron, with its solidity and structural weight. The two materials exist in a balance of mutual trust, with metal evoking architecture and glass capturing light. Vasileva also blurs the line between drawing and sculpture. On one hand, iron rods trace linear trajectories in the gallery space, creating planar pauses similar to the voids she uses in her drawings. In both productions, she relies on the materials and the viewer’s perceptual participation to complete the picture. Thus, the works become spatial drawings in their own right.
Construction Time interprets construction as a way of thinking and seeing. Vasileva’s critical and poetic perspective shows that every beam and line carries a potential for meaning. The exhibition embraces fragility and impermanence while also finding a kind of structure and clarity within them. There is a conceptual balance here between making and unmaking, and Vasileva’s work emerges as part of a broader discourse on space and change. Construction Time can therefore be read as both an individual statement and a reflection on the conditions of the world. By emphasizing states of formation, the exhibition invites us to find value in process and perception. In the gallery space, construction between lines and forms is perceived as a continuous construction of awareness. Viewers complete the works with the act of seeing, and thus the real structure of Construction Time is built.
– Firat Arapoglu

Stela Vasileva
Stela Vasileva (b.1983) lives and works in Sofia. She graduated from the National Academy of Fine Arts in Sofia with a major in Mural Painting. She won the Gaudenz B. Ruf Award (in the Young Artist category), (2010); Nominations for the BAZA Award for Contemporary Art (2013-2015) as well as various residences including: Roam-projects, Bulgarian-German residency programme, Berlin (2022); Cité Internationale des arts Paris, France (2014); Krinzinger Projekte, Petomihalyfa, Hungary – Vienna (2012); KulturKontakt, Vienna, Austria (2012).
Among her solo appearances are: Verticality (and Other Spatial Orientation), curated by Boyana Djikova, +359 Gallery, Sofia (2024); [ Lait ] Via. Art space, Polygraphy office center, Sofia, curated by Martina Yordanova, (2023); Lines of Deconstruction, Roam space, Berlin (2022); Transposition, Posta space, Sofia (2022) and others.
Stela Vasileva participated in numerous group exhibitions and projects some of which: Autumn Exhibitions, Plovdiv (2025); Infinity Mirroring, Station Gallery, Bratislava, collaboration with Iskra Blagoeva (2023); Palmen aus Plastik, Gallery Waidspeicher, Kunstmusеen Erfurt, curated by Philipp Schreiner (2023); Shifting Colors, Intimacy and spectacle in the age of social media, The Largo / Sofia Art Project Vol.1 (2021); “The Pric/ze is Right” - NEXT Balkan: Bulgarian Contemporary Art in Belgrade, Sеrbia (2021); History Between, Regional History Museum – Sofia, curated by Vessela Nozharova (2020); State of Apparition, Aether Gallery, Hague, Holland (2019) and others.
Stela Vasileva works in the field of the object, the installation, and the drawing. She explores the form, the objects in space, with the main attempt to unload the objects of any superfluous elements, while also putting it out of the context of its concrete (ordinary) environment. In doing so, she often erases the boundaries of real space.
Yerleştirme görüntüsü | Fotoğraf: Bozhana Dimitrova
Stela Vasileva

On the roof II
2023, color markers on photo paper, 40x50cm

On the roof I
2023, color markers on photo paper, 40x50cm

On the Wall
2012, colored markers, paper, 40 x 50 cm

On the Wall (fragment)
2012, colored markers, paper, 30 x 40 cm

Renovation I
2014, colored markers, paper, 40×60 cm

Renovation II
2014, colored markers, paper, 40×60 cm

Cement I
2014, colored markers, paper, 60 x 40 cm

Cement II
2014, colored markers, paper, 40 x 60 cm

Cement II
2014, colored markers, paper, 40 x 60 cm

Energy
2014, colored markers, paper, 60 x 80 cm

Bags I
Oil on canvas, 2025, 100 x 100 cm

Bags II
Oil on canvas, 2025, 100 x 100 cm

Bags III
Oil on canvas, 2025, 100 x 100 cm

Bags IV
Oil on canvas, 2025, 100 x 100 cm

Verticality series
Stone & glass, 2024, 40x35x20

Verticality series
concrete & glass, 2024, 15x15x16

