Culture should not feel distant.
It should feel like a door.
Vivienne enters paintings, classic literature, cities and eras — discovering what beauty remembers and why it still matters now.
Enter The Living Gallery
She does not quietly admire beauty. She walks straight into it.
Vivienne is a stylish, sensual, curious and emotionally vivid traveller who enters paintings, classic literature, cities and eras — turning culture into something you can feel, not just recognise.
Adult. Luminous. Expressive. Playful. Intelligent. Culturally curious. Alive.
Paintings, sculpture and visual worlds. Vivienne steps inside the canvas and finds what the artwork never stopped saying.
Classic literature and fictional worlds. The stories that built rooms inside you. The words that turned into places.
Architecture, cities and eras. Places that hold emotion in their walls. Where Vivienne walks and history breathes.
Two entries open. Two worlds waiting.
A night sky that never feels still.
Explore the Blue World
Gold, intimacy and the moment before a kiss.
Enter the Golden WorldGold. Desire. A moment held before surrender.
Gustav Klimt's The Kiss, originally titled Lovers, was presented in 1908 and completed in 1909. Today it is held by the Belvedere in Vienna.
Wrapped in gold and ornament, the couple seems removed from ordinary space — suspended inside one intense, intimate moment.
The mosaic patterns dissolve the boundary between figure and decoration, between person and painting.
To Vivienne, it feels like love and a spell at the same time.
Enter the Golden World
Vivienne enters Klimt's golden world —
where desire becomes ornament
and a famous painting begins to breathe.
Van Gogh created The Starry Night in Saint-Rémy in June 1889, inspired by the view from his window at Saint-Paul-de-Mausole — but transformed through colour, movement and imagination.
To Vivienne, its swirling sky feels like spirals of time: moments turning, returning and continuing long after one human life.
Which canvas should open next?
Which story should become a place?
Which streets still remember?
Which century should she enter?