Born in 1961, Dan Perjovschi is a Romanian visual artist who combines drawing, comics, and graffiti to comment on current political, social, and cultural issues. Trained as a press illustrator in post-Ceaușescu Romania, he developed a sharp, rapid, and darkly humorous graphic style. Active in civil society, he collaborates with the cultural magazine Revista 22, fostering dialogue between Romanian and international art scenes. For the past decade, Perjovschi has abandoned paper in favor of temporary surfaces—walls, floors, windows—covered with marker or chalk drawings in a free and spontaneous gesture. His works, erased at the end of exhibitions, follow a cycle of appearance/disappearance that reflects the volatility of current events. He plays with this ephemerality by sometimes involving the public, who are invited to walk on the works or draw over them. His work has been presented at MoMA (New York), Art Institute (Chicago), Hamburger Kunsthalle, MOT Tokyo, Kiasma (Helsinki), Hamburger Bahnhof (Berlin), and at the Venice Biennale (48th and 52nd editions) and the Istanbul Biennale (9th edition).