KaMa: Music as Living Art

Welcome to KaMa’s sonic universe — a place where music dissolves into painting, and human and mathematical disciplines intertwine.

Every note becomes a brushstroke, and every melody unfolds like a map. She collaborates with painters to create multisensory experiences, weaving concepts from psychology and mathematics into sound, offering a truly unique interpretation of music.

For KaMa, music is meant to be collective.

She wants her work to be more than something you simply listen to — it’s a journey. One that carries you beyond sound, into a space that touches both mind and spirit.

“Artists should remain invisible channels, allowing themselves to be possessed by the music, rather than possess it.”

Defining Moments

 

KaMa’s artistic path has been shaped through a series of experiences that have progressively defined her personal expressive language.

Among them, one of the most significant was a live performance in which she integrated elements of Indian tradition, collaborating with sitar and tabla. On that occasion, the stage was conceived as an installation space — an extension of her inner dimension — constructed through personal objects and literary references, transforming the performance into a layered narrative, both visual and sonic.

Each concert thus becomes a compositional act in real time: an open framework where music, symbolism, and stage presence converge to create an authentic, non-replicable experience.

Fun Facts 

Outside of music, she is deeply interested in practices that explore the inner world and human consciousness.

She is drawn to yoga and meditation as daily tools for grounding and self-awareness, as well as numerology and psychology, which help her understand patterns, identity, and transformation.

She is particularly inspired by the work of Carl Jung and his exploration of archetypes, the unconscious, and the multiplicity of the self — themes that strongly influence both her life and artistic expression.

Sources of Inspiration

She finds inspiration for her music in unexpected places — from reading essays on psychology and even physics, to simply observing people while sitting on a bench in a square.

She is fascinated by human behavior, by what is visible and what remains hidden.

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“The purpose of art is to cleanse our souls from the dust of everyday life.”

— Pablo Picasso