Rodion Voskresenskii (b. 1994, Taganrog, Russia) is a figurative painter working with portraiture and the human figure. 

His practice centers on memory as a rupture between a lived moment and what remains of it. Within this interval, body and light create a displacement through which the canvas preserves a sense of distance. 

He works primarily in oil, using the medium’s slowness and resistance to relate the image to the passage of time and materiality. 

His paintings are built through controlled light, volume, and restrained composition. The plasticity of the figures is reduced and devoid of expressive gesture, not allowing the pose to fix a state. 

The images and characters in his work emerge at the intersection of sensuality, symbolic structures, and intimate experience. They hold a trace of a fleeting sensation, existing in tension with the continuity of reality, where it inevitably loses its integrity.