"Art has the power to transform spaces and to open something within us." – Brigitta Nemeth

My story
Today I live and paint in Vienna. But the path that brought me here was anything but linear.
I grew up in a small town in western Hungary. Art was my first language, long before I had words for what I was feeling. That inner calling led me across Europe, from Szombathely to Munich and Vienna, and on to London and Lisbon. I wanted to understand how spaces shape us and how design transforms the way we live and work. After graduating from the University of Applied Arts Vienna, I became Head of Design at Blaha Office, where I created furniture for modern working environments. International awards such as the Red Dot Award and the iF Design Award followed. I had achieved what I had dreamed of for years and for the first time, I felt free enough to simply be myself.
A journey to the Azores became a turning point. Ten meters of raw canvas. Wind. Salt. Just that white surface in front of me. No concept, only feeling. Something I had held back for a long time began to flow again. Soon after, I became a mother. With love came a crisis: Who am I if I am not performing, not achieving, but simply being? The answer was clear: I am an artist.
Today I unite the precision of an award-winning designer with the depth of personal transformation. Spaces are not neutral. They shape how we think, how we feel, and how we perceive ourselves.
A single work of art can transform the atmosphere of a room and with it, the mindset of the person within it. Art is not decoration. It is the emotional center of a space. And that is exactly why I create it.
Discover my artworks
Klimt Villa
Exhibiting my works at the Klimt Villa was a deeply moving and symbolic moment. This historic house is the place where Gustav Klimt lived and worked during the final years of his life. Klimt is considered one of the most important and internationally renowned painters of the Viennese Secession, and his legacy continues to shape the history of modern art.
To present my works within this building carried a special intensity. Between past and present a quiet dialogue emerged, and within that tension my paintings seemed to unfold in a new way. It was a moment of connection across time and an experience that felt both humbling and powerful.









