Bio
b. 1977, Lublin, Poland
Kasia Muzyka is a Polish-American artist based in Minneapolis, MN. Working outside of traditional academic structures, her practice is guided by deep intuition, lived experience, and spiritual inquiry. Her work weaves mysticism, human nature, and transcendental philosophy with questions drawn from quantum physics—offering layered visual expressions that explore the nature of existence, perception, and the unseen.
Muzyka’s work bridges the invisible and the seen, asking not just what we perceive—but what we remember. Often centering feminine presence as a portal, she invites viewers into intimate encounters with their inner worlds.
She has exhibited nationally and internationally, with solo shows including Inner Explorations at Gal Art in Minneapolis and the upcoming The Sacred Condition of Being in Manhattan, New York. Her work has appeared with Tyrrell Art Gallery, Dove Gallery, and in global charity auctions organized by Phoenix Opera and the Global Disaster Relief Team.
Her art and voice have been featured in Vanity Fair, Arts to Hearts, Voyage Minnesota, New Visionary Magazine, and on podcasts including New Visionary and Born to Create. She has also taken part in artist talks hosted by Victoria J. Fry of Visionary Art Collective and Warnes Contemporary. Her work was shown at Red Dot Miami, a satellite fair during Art Basel.
Beyond painting, Muzyka explores cross-disciplinary collaborations in fashion and music—such as cover design for MiLarKey and founding Call2Love, a wearable art brand. While self-directed in her development, she is currently deepening her classical foundation through select training at The Atelier Studio Program of Fine Art in Minneapolis. Her work resides in private collections across the United States, Canada, and Europe.
Read more in depth biography below.
The Painter of the Unseen
Kasia Muzyka is an intuitive artist, mother, and seeker of the sacred threads that weave life’s visible and invisible dimensions. For over two decades, she has immersed herself in a holistic path of personal and spiritual evolution—drawing from mysticism, yoga, alchemical philosophy, and ancient shamanic wisdom, including the Toltec teachings of Don Miguel Ruiz. Influenced by contemporary thinkers like Joe Dispenza, Ken Wilber, and Alan Watts, Kasia bridges ancient traditions with modern consciousness studies.
Her journey led her into the depths of Jungian psychology and the transformational teachings of Recall Healing, where she explored how unresolved emotions and subconscious patterns manifest within the body. For Kasia, healing begins in the unseen—where thoughts, feelings, and inherited imprints shape the architecture of experience. Yoga became a grounding force in this exploration—a moving meditation that recycles stagnant energy and restores alignment between body and spirit.
In pursuit of the invisible, Kasia studied the Akashic Records and spent five years immersed in the Mystery School tradition, engaging with esoteric knowledge to deepen her intuitive access to subtle realities. She believes that energy never lies, and that through attunement, we can read the vibrational field and receive guidance from realms beyond the rational mind.
Her path has also included the study of astrology, Tarot, and the Enneagram, which she sees not as systems of prediction, but as sacred languages—each offering insight into the energetic states of the soul and its unfolding journey. Passionate about dream interpretation, she regards dreams as symbolic transmissions from the psyche and glimpses into multidimensional time.
Kasia’s creative process arises from an altered state of perception, where she becomes a vessel for messages beyond form. Her art is informed by quantum principles, neuroplasticity, and her deep interest in cycles of nature as mirrors for emotional and mental resonance. She is a member of private groups dedicated to exploring the frontiers of consciousness and the evolving role of humanity in the cosmos.
Today, Kasia paints to make the unseen visible. Her works are portals—expressions of remembrance, healing, and communion with the Heart. She views art as a sacred tool: one that not only awakens, but reconfigures the inner landscape, inviting the viewer into a space where perception itself becomes an act of transformation.