Milan, Italy – October 29, 2025 – You may not yet have heard the name Golsa Golchini, but if you care about art that speaks in soft simplicity and vivid surprise, you will want to. Based in Milan since 2004, Golchini was born in Tehran in 1986, graduated from the Academy of Fine Arts of Brera (Visual Arts, 2010) and has steadily built a body of work that invites you to look again at the everyday.
Golchini uses mixed media, often on humble surfaces like cardboard or vintage luggage, to compose scenes that feel familiar—objects you recognise, moments you’ve lived—but with a twist that unsettles expectation. Her own words give the clue: “My artworks are creations through different visual art’s languages. I love to combine all that I have ever learnt during my journey … I truly believe that the highest purpose of Art is to be loved and … serve it on a silver plate to the observer.”
As an art lover reading this, you’ll find her approach refreshing. She rejects complexity for its own sake. In her view, our century “is in true need of simplicity and joy.” And yet, don’t mistake that for ease. A piece that looks simple may carry depth: Golchini explains that although the artworks are simple, they “usually express challenging situations.”
Take for instance her 2025 mixed-media piece Underwater Magic (120×97 cm) or Keep Going, created on vintage luggage. These works invite you to reflect on travel, time, memory, transformation. By using unexpected supports, she places you—her observer—into a moment of pause, letting you reassess what objects mean, what you’ve carried, and what you leave behind.
Her trajectory also underscores a global sensibility: coming from Iran, studying and living in Milan, speaking to a broad audience through a language of form and gesture rather than text. On one gallery platform she writes: “My artworks are my way of communicating with the observer about the things of everyday life that we all have in common. Things we do, objects we use, emotions we feel.” In a world saturated with spectacle, her art asks you to slow down.
If you’ve seen her Instagram feed—an anchor of her communication—you’ll notice a consistent statement: “If you love Art hard enough it will love you back.” That phrase says something about intention. She invites you not just to look but to enter a conversation with the work, to allow art to respond. And as an art lover you’ll recognise how rare that invitation is.
What next? For you as a viewer or collector, this means there’s room here to discover an artist whose work is accessible without being shallow, whose materials are humble yet conceptually rich, whose tone is warm but not sentimental. You might visit her website gallery to explore recent pieces, check what’s new for 2025, and reflect on what resonates with your own experience of daily objects or memories.
In short: Golchini shows you how art doesn’t always need to shout. She shifts the volume down to let you hear yourself in the work. And as someone who loves art, your job is to lean in and listen.
View originals, prints, and limited editions at golsagolchiniart.com. Follow @golsa.golchini on Instagram or @GolsaGolchini on Tik Tok for glimpses of how she keeps turning the unseen into something unforgettable.

Hello art lovers. My name is Deepak Mehla, and I’m from Karnal, India. I enjoy reading stories about people’s struggles and how they overcome them. These motivational stories work like a source of energy for me.
Although Arttellers is completely different from my original vision, I, too, am going through a challenging phase in life. To keep myself busy and to hold on to hope, I share stories of artists with all of you. I believe these stories will give you a new direction, just as they inspire me.
Arttellers exists because I want to share how some people turn the work they love into their livelihood, and how choosing their passion leads them to success. I started Arttellers to keep my own hope alive and to help you discover people whose journeys might inspire you too.


