A joint exhibition by the plastic artists Irina Shuh and Vasili Ivanciuc is hosted by the OSCE Mission to Moldova. It will last by October 27. The exhibition titled “Projection of Sensitiveness” includes 50 works. Forty-one of them are oil canvases and nine are paintings made on silk. The painter Vasili Ivanciuc says that his works (“Autumn Sky”, “After Rain”, “Stone House in Butuceni”, “House of Two Brothers” etc.) reflect his perceptions, sensations, attitudes and emotions caused by the surroundings. The landscapes and static nature caught by the artist is not a faithful reproduction of the reality, but a projection of his inner world that cannot be gripped by modern technical means, Vasli Ivanciuc says. Irina Shuh is author of the decorative works made on silk. Among the exhibited paintings is her last work entitled “Cemetery”, which has the cemetery in Butuceni as prototype. The oil paintings of Irina Shuh feature static objects such as chairs, tables, windows, doors. The painter says she is interested in the places that the people visited and the objects that they used because they preserve their energy, prints. When left, these objects establish a border between two realities, Irina Shuh says. The painter Violeta Zabulica-Diordiev says that the works of Irina Shuh are very close to her own visions due to the theatrical-decorative manner used by the author. Though the couple Irina Shuh and Vasili Ivanciuc work in tandem, each of them manages to keep their individuality and originality, Zabulica-Diordiev says. Irina Shuh and Vasili Ivanciuc graduated from the Institute of Decorative Arts in Lvov in 1985 and are members of the International Association of Artists UNESCO and of the Association of Textile and Fashion Painters of Moldova. Their works had been exhibited in Moldova, Ukraine, Russia, Poland, Switzerland, the Netherlands, the U.S. and Canada.