Year of the Fire Horse

February 2026

First time I heard about the Year of the Fire Horse was twenty years ago. In one of the chance encounters that make artistic life so interesting, I met a writer and a film director Julia Kwan, who was then promoting her new feature film “Eve and the Fire Horse”. A sweet and gentle story about a gifted nine-year-old girl growing up in a Chinese immigrant family in Vancouver opened hearts of local audiences, because it allowed us to see the challenges of our mixed multicultural society through the eyes of an innocent child. Eve used her wild imagination to process influences coming from all sides and make sense of the world around her. She was born in the year of the Fire Horse, which happens only once in sixty years, and according to the old Chinese superstition brings misfortune and troubles to girls. Eve’s vivid dreams blend with reality as she creates her own world of wonder, acceptance and love.

This introduction prompted me to look at the Chinese Lunar Calendar and I was surprised by its long tradition. For millenia, before it got corrupted into a mere superficial fortune telling, the calendar offered a very complex guide based on a Taoist view of the world and the Universe. The system was devised to help people understand and balance their existence in harmony with the planetary cycles. Twelve archetypes symbolized by the animals interacting with five earthly elements explain a multitude of possible energy manifestation in material and spiritual realms. The calendar still holds the ancient wisdom for seekers of today. In comparison, our modern calendar seems rather soulless, as the time is now being kept by exceedingly precise machines that have absoulutely no interest in human life.

The second encounter with the Fire Horse came years later, when I was working on the third panel for the Venus Triptych, dedicated to the Divine Feminine manifestation through the fire element. In the ancient European mythology, the fire horse represented destruction and at the same time purification that prepares grounds for renewal. It was a very interesting project. Wire in multiple colours blended in a simple half stitch pattern, creating a fiery surge against the dark negative space. I still remember the intensity of the work so focused that it at times felt like being consumed by the flames. Interestingly, when the viewers look at the picture, they often see the flames, without noticing the horse. Once they realize it is there, they can’t take their eyes away from the fiery creature.

The third rendezvous is happening now: the Year of the Fire Horse just started and it will undoubtedly bring a lot of raw energy and many passionate moments. While the sheer power of the fire element in high speed motion might seem frightening, with the right intention and focus it can be harnessed to deliver profound transformations. 

We are in for a wild ride !

Happy Birthday, Julia !!

And a happy, visionary and fertile year to all fearlessly creative artists, including the gentle but high-spirited lacemakers !!!

Spring Chickens and Eggs

April 2, 2025

Spring has arrived and I feel like celebrating… sprouting, growing and blooming with plants, chirping and singing with birds, building nests and taking care of eggs… Chicken eggs in particular! 

It must be my Slavic roots drawing me back to spring festivals of pagan tribes. In their spring rites, the eggs symbolized fertility, new life and abundance. Tradition of decorating eggs survived from ancient times through successive generations of girls who learned the delicate art from their mothers and grandmothers. Every region has a specific method – wax painting or resist dying, scratching, straw applications, perforating, and even wire wrapping – and there are as many original patterns as there are girls. Each saves the best egg for a boy that is close to her heart. 
I think that’s one of the reason why this tradition is still alive. Love is perpetual!

Of course, I couldn’t resist the idea of decorating eggs with wire lace, bobbin and needle, and both techniques worked out beautifully. The small scale designs are fun to make for beginners and experienced lacemakers alike. I believe that Spring and Easter decorations are more meaningful when they are made by hand, especially when they are intended for special gift giving. 

My favourite pattern is the Chicken Egg Stand because it holds a lot of creative potential for egg variations. While the stand remains the same, its content changes the overall decorative effect.

Every year my lace chickens are curious how their eggs will look like as we search in the garden to see what we find. This year it’s violas! So many self seeded all over the place and the tiny plants fit perfectly into hollow egg shells. Carefully transplanted, they look very cute in their miniature pots, sitting in the Chicken bases. It is fun to water them daily and wait for the flowers to open. What colours are they going to be?

One Chicken, a dark brown Buckeye, carries an oregano seedling for my friend’s new herb patch. For good luck!

When the plants outgrow their temporary home they will be transferred to the outside pots or beds. The egg shells crushed to small pieces will released calcium carbonate and enrich the soil with essential elements. The plants will grow and blossom all summer long. Seedlings that won’t get transplanted will be composted, so there will be no waste. Mother Nature will be pleased.

The lace chickens will then return to their envelope to rest until next year. Unlike my other Spring/Easter decorations they store flat, taking up hardly any space. 
I am so glad to have them, we enjoy each other’s company during all lovely festivities, spring after spring!

Over the years, I designed more lace egg decorations, mostly as workshop projects, and I see potential for many more.

But sometimes I feel that my “eggthusiasm” is a bit displaced. After all, I have lived in a different part of the world for a long time. Maybe I should start to think about lacy Easter Bunnies 🙂

Cheers to all creative spring ideas, wherever and however they manifest!

Lenka


Year of the Snake

January 29, 2025

Snake in enamelled copper with labradorite stones – tape lace with torchon ground filling.


New Work

September Equinox 2023


Divine Harmony: Offering to Father Sun and Mother Earth

handmade bobbin lace sculpture by Lenka Suchanek

enamelled copper wire with semi-precious stones

50 x 50 x 10 cm

frame made from reclaimed red cedar by Colin Hamilton of Thuja Wood Art