Skip to content

Essay

Nest

— Aglaya Nogina

so I wove myself a nest. One I can carry with me.

…actually, my real “nest” is my little Harvest backpack. The one I grabbed when I left the dorm on the first day of the war. A few things that suddenly became my whole life. They’re still with me — quiet objects that give me a sense of home.

…I wanted to make this metaphor real — to weave a proper nest and turn it into a backpack. It’s heavy, almost ten kilos, made of branches and sticks that press into my shoulders. Fragile. Awkward. Hard to wear — just like emigration isn’t comfortable, just like living knowing that war is happening in my real home.

…and yet, I can’t just take this nest off. It stays with me, like the experience itself.

…these photos are documentation of a performance. I spent a whole day living normally without removing the nest from my shoulders. Doing everyday things in Neuss, the city I’ve been living in since the full-scale invasion began.

…for me, this work is about home as I feel it now: not a fixed place, not material things, but something I carry with me always. A home turned into movement, into readiness, into memories and people, into the weight of what I can’t separate from myself — and at the same time, into the freedom to move forward.

More writing, sketches, and studio notes are shared in the art diary.

Read the art diary on Patreon

More writings