“Red is the color of blood and fire, love and war, death and rebirth.”
“The first color of my collection was also the first in the history of various cultures, the Great Mother Goddess was often associated with it ... I was struck by its depth and duality, reflecting our reality on all planes of being.”
”The cult of the Mother of Gods has been revered in ancient times since the Paleolithic Era. Our planet Earth [Gaia her real name, the same as in the pantheon of the gods of Ancient Greece] is the mother of us. The material nature of reality [the Manifested Universe] is the feminine aspect of God, representing the Great Spirit capable of creating entire worlds.”
“Красный - цвет крови и огня, любви и войны, смерти и возрождения.”
“Первый цвет моей коллекции был и в истории различных культур человечества первым, часто с ним связывали Великую Богиню Мать ...
Меня поразила его глубина и двойственность, отражающая нашу реальность на всех планах бытия.”
“The Goddess and the Horseman are the main characters of my couture collection.
While I have been creating the sketches I come up with the images of two characters, which I displayed in my collection unconsciously. I was trying to figure out what the main characters and their images were, why my soul was pointing me to the tandem of the Horseman and the Goddess.
I searched for answers, trying to find various historical chronicles to discover the interconnection. Among all the abundance of information, I found an ancient image of the Goddess and the Horseman in a bas-relief. However, there is no reliable knowledge and no clear answer explaining their relationship.
Upon reflection, I came to my conclusions. I see this connection as a principle of the Universe. The Goddess, aka mother, aka matter, and the Horseman, aka spirit, who explores matter. She gives life - he brings death, which is a cyclical process and a principle of the Universe itself.”
“I feel that all destructive events, both external and internal, are part of the journey of humanity, leading to a new birth.”
“Lilith was the first woman created at the same time as a man [Adam] and was expelled from Paradise because she claimed her rights, that she was like a God [like a man] and would not submit to a man.
During the formation of patriarchy, Lilith was removed from the sacred texts and given a negative essence so as not to be mentioned.
She is a manifestation of sexual femininity, which is treated as something dark. And until now the echoes of this attitude influence the consciousness of most people. A woman who shows her sexuality [which is given to her by nature] is considered vulgar, naughty, wrong and the like.”
“I want to note that only the balance of all energies, including sexual one, gives a sense of harmony and a burst of power to both a man and a woman. Everything is interconnected, so one should not exclude and ignore the sexual energy.”
“The cult of the Mother Goddess, and subsequently of all goddesses, is reflected in many ancient cultures of the world.
This cult encompassed all aspects of human life, be it war, hunting or motherhood. This confirms that woman was a multidimensional being, which was loved, respected and worshipped.”
“The first deities were female goddesses, later female priestesses began to serve them. The Great Goddesses and their priestesses were the living embodiment of the unity of body, mind, and spirit. Women priestesses symbolized the Great Mother-Goddess who gave life to all that exists. The woman was divine because she gives light to new life.”
“When male gods arose, male priests appear as well. But at the most important moments of religious ceremonies the male priests had to wear women's clothes, because only her earthly daughters had the right to approach the shrines of the Great Mother Goddess. As if turning into a Woman for a time, the male priests thereby recognized the exclusivity of the female sex in close communion with the Great Mother.”
“In the patriarchal society, the custom of wearing long clothes at particularly solemn moments is still observed today by priests of world religions, lawyers [during court proceedings] and scientists. This custom is undoubtedly rooted in ancient times, where women, who served as priestesses and judges, as well were the intellectual elite of society, wore long robes in contrast to men.”