Andronik Khachiian works at the edge of logic — somewhere between a dream, a protest, and a really good glitch.
Born in Moscow and now based in Mexico, Andronik is a multidisciplinary artist whose work spans sculpture, light installations, photography, performance, and participatory chaos. His projects are built like emotional systems — flag sequences based on grief patterns, drills you can draw with, artworks that shine from the inside out. It’s less about form than it is about feeling.
He’s known for rejecting conventional composition and instead building systems of improvisation: a heartbreak becomes a black-and-white landscape (Somewhere Over the Rainbow), a political loss becomes a refuge (Death of a Hero), and a war becomes a library of personal flags (Flags of Destinies).
He’s exhibited across Russia, Europe, and Latin America, and his participatory installations often invite strangers to destroy their perfectionism in public.
At Lola, his work brings both vulnerability and voltage — a reminder that emotion doesn’t have to be clean to be powerful.