

My work explores the tension between chaos and structure through abstraction, evoking deep emotions and inviting reflection on inner landscapes and human experience.
Biography
Weronika Dyląg is a contemporary Polish artist, born in 1987 in Nakło nad Notecią. She currently lives and works in Warsaw. Rooted in abstraction, her practice is defined by vivid color harmonies, dynamic gestures, and experimental techniques that merge spontaneity with control.
Her signature approach often involves a method she calls "blow painting"—a process of guiding acrylic and oil paints with air, allowing forms to emerge organically. This technique infuses her canvases with a sense of movement, unpredictability, and ethereality, reflecting the tensions between chaos and structure that lie at the core of her work.
Dyląg’s paintings are informed by her interest in psychology and the invisible architecture of human emotion. Drawing inspiration from abstract expressionists such as Helen Frankenthaler and Chuang Che, she constructs layered compositions that invite introspection—offering not answers, but space for personal reflection and emotional resonance.
In her recent series Balanced Chaos, the artist explores the fragile equilibrium between instinct and order, nature and abstraction. Works like Dissolution and Storm embody this search, where bold, expressive fields seem to bloom and dissolve in the same moment.
Weronika Dyląg has exhibited her works in solo and group exhibitions across Europe and the United States, including shows in Belgium, Spain, Italy, and Poland. Her paintings, often created in large formats, speak a universal language of feeling—inviting the viewer into a realm where emotion becomes form.