Tanya Besedina is a Latvian-Ukrainian-Canadian sculptor based in Toronto, working primarily with translucent porcelain. Her practice explores fragility, rupture, memory, and emotional endurance through sculpture and installation. Drawn to porcelain for its contradictory nature (delicate yet resilient, luminous yet breakable), she uses the material to examine how humans preserve meaning through objects, ritual, and touch.
Originally trained in fashion design in Ukraine, Besedina later shifted toward sculpture in search of a slower and more intimate relationship with material. Her work is shaped by experiences of migration, motherhood, and sensory perception, often combining porcelain with salvaged and timeworn objects that carry traces of previous lives. Through recurring forms such as vessels, eyes, shells, branches, and organic growths, she creates psychologically charged environments that move between tenderness and unease, protection and exposure, presence and disappearance.
Besedina’s sculptures have been exhibited across North America. In 2025, she received the Craft Ontario Helen Copeland Memorial Award in Ceramics and won the Made with Laguna International Competition. Her work invites contemplative encounters with memory, transformation, and the fragile structures through which humans endure.