“Art is not a mirror held up to reality
but a hammer with which to shape it.”
― Bertolt Brecht

During London Art Week, surrounded by artists, collectors, curators, and cultural figures, I found myself returning to Brecht’s powerful observation. Art does not simply document the world. At its best, it challenges, questions, and transforms it.
We live in a time saturated with images. Every day we consume thousands of photographs, videos, and messages. Yet very few of them remain with us. The images that endure are those that disturb our assumptions, awaken our curiosity, or reveal a truth we had overlooked.
For me, art has never been about decoration. It is about possibility. A photograph, a film, a painting, or a sculpture can alter the way we see ourselves and others. It can challenge conformity, celebrate individuality, and remind us that reality is never fixed.
Attending London Art Week with my husband and creative collaborator, Aeon Rose, was a reminder that art remains one of the few spaces where freedom of imagination can still flourish. Across galleries and conversations, I encountered artists committed not merely to reflecting culture, but to reshaping it.
Perhaps this is why art continues to matter. It invites us to imagine different futures, different identities, and different ways of being.
Art is not a mirror.
It is an act of transformation.
































