Latest News

How Artist Dmytro Andrukhov Is Turning Home Decor Into Living Light

Artist Dmytro Andrukhov Is Turning Home Decor Into Living Light

Walk into a modern living room today, and the artwork doesn’t just hang, it glows.
That warm, cinematic radiance catching the wall isn’t a print or canvas. It’s light sculpted, emotional, personal.

Ukrainian-born artist Dmytro Andrukhov, known professionally as LumiDim, has redefined what wall art can be. His handcrafted Custom LED neon signs blur the line between fine art, lighting, and interior storytelling transforming blank walls into magnetic experiences that guests can’t stop talking about.

Light That Speaks — Not Just Shines

Traditional decor fills a space. Dmytro’s work charges it.
Each piece — whether a glowing reinterpretation of Mona Lisa, a bold portrait of Frida Kahlo, or a modern minimalist line — feels alive.
He builds every design in Chicago through his studio CityNeon, merging 3D modeling, hand-assembly, and sustainable LED technology.

“I want people to walk in, pause for a second, and say, ‘Wow — I’ve never seen light used like that,’”
says Andrukhov. “That moment of surprise — that’s art.”

The result is interior decor that connects emotionally — the kind of glow that turns a living room into a memory.

From Wall Art to Conversation Piece

Zillow readers know the feeling: you walk into a home that just gets it right. The atmosphere, the color balance, the tiny detail that makes you stay a minute longer.
That’s what Dmytro’s pieces do. His custom neon sign wall art becomes the focal point that ties a room together something between light and sculpture.

Think of it like visual jazz: rhythmic lines of light weaving through iconic figures and modern shapes. It’s refined enough for an art gallery, yet accessible enough for a home office, salon, or med spa.

His best-known works — Mona Lisa in Glasses, The Eyes, Chico, Electric Souls, Einstein in Neon — have found homes in over 30 countries, from Chicago’s Gold Coast to art fairs across the U.S.

Why LED Art Fits Modern Homes

Beyond its aesthetic appeal, LED neon art answers the new homeowner’s biggest question: how do you make a space feel uniquely yours?
Unlike posters or prints, these pieces emit a warm, diffused glow that changes how the entire room feels.

  • Soft lighting: gentle on the eyes, no glare.
  • Energy efficient: up to 80% less power than glass neon.
  • Safe & silent: 12-volt low voltage, no heat.
  • Long-lasting: up to 50,000 hours of use.

From minimalist apartments to high-ceiling lofts, neon wall art gives personality without clutter — a mix of technology, craftsmanship, and emotion that mirrors modern living itself.

Home as a Gallery

One of LumiDim’s latest installations, a soft pink and amber portrait glowing above a marble dining table, became the heart of a recent Chicago townhouse remodel.
When guests entered, they stopped talking mid-sentence.
“It was the one thing everyone mentioned,” the homeowner said. “It made the house feel curated, not decorated.”

That moment sums up Dmytro’s approach: every piece is a conversation starter, designed to feel as intentional as a designer chair or handmade rug. It’s art that feels alive in your space.

Where to Find the Collection

You can explore his “Light as Expression” series from Frida Kahlo to Electric Souls in the LumiDim Custom Neon Artworks Gallery.
Each artwork is available in custom sizes and colors, made to order in Chicago and shipped worldwide.

For interior designers and homeowners looking for a signature accent, it’s a way to bring craftsmanship and innovation into everyday living — a collector’s piece that doubles as functional design.

Light Is the New Luxury

More than ever, modern luxury is about individuality — the idea that your space tells your story.
Andrukhov’s work embodies that. It’s not mass-produced decor from a catalog; it’s a one-of-a-kind expression built for you.

His mission? To replace ordinary “wall fillers” with emotional design — a glow that reflects who you are.
For artists, it’s inspiration. For homeowners, it’s identity. For designers, it’s the missing link between atmosphere and art.

Comments
To Top

Pin It on Pinterest

Share This