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A photo project about the culture of animal burial around the world  

I am trying to analyse the human-animal connection through my documented pictures. This project started in my hometown Vilnius. There are a couple of  places where people bury their beloved pet companions. One of them is legal – an empty field just outside the city, and the other one is illegal – a surrealist place just under the TV tower, surrounded by a soviet architectural landscape, where people bury their pets, though it is not allowed. While documenting the tombstones I was amazed by the aesthetics and emotional aftertaste of this phenomenon and began to do research in this field. The human-animal connection is universal despite cultural, social or any other differences and I am working on portraying that. So far I’ve documented cemeteries in Vilnius, Riga, Minsk, Moscow, New York and Las Vegas. I am exploring cultural attitudes towards animals in different environments by documenting and doing detailed research on the pet burial places, both official and unofficial. I was amazed by the versatility and uniqueness of this phenomenon. It never occurred to me that cemeteries from different continents can be more similar to each other than the cemeteries that are only separated by 2 hours’ drive and my goal is to reflect that in this project.

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My name is Asta Ostrovskaja

My name is Asta Ostrovskaja, I am a Multidisciplinary Visual Artist/ Art Director from Vilnius Lithuania. My background in Visual Art, Art Direction and Graphic Design leaded me to be interested in an abstract documentation of the contemporary life. Experience which I gained working in different visual fields reflects in the discourse of my work. The field of interests which I explore could be named as a junction between:
- real and surreal
- abstract and concrete
- humor and sadness
- nostalgia and futurism
- tangibility and stiffness
- 2D and 3D

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