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Nadia |
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"Zara, posing for a
picture" |
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| Artist: |
Nadia |
| Title: |
Zara, posing for
a picture |
| Category: |
Realism |
| Sub-Category: |
Oil on canvas |
| Artwork: |
Original,
framed |
| Limited edition: |
none |
| Dimensions (approx): |
36" x 48" |
| Price: |
$1,200 |
| Delivery time: |
immediately |
| Shipping &
Handling: |
$75 nationwide,
$100 international, free
delivery within Las Vegas |
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"Zara,
posing for a picture" by Nadia |
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Artist Bio:
Nadia
Nadia is a native of Russia in Eastern Siberia. There
she learned an early appreciation for cultural diversity as she was exposed to
the art of the local Buryat culture, the influence of the Chinese, and her own
strong classical, Russian tradition.
In addition to Russia, she also lived in China. Since
her arrival in the U.S., she lived in Chicago and Las Vegas.
Nadia absorbed all variety of mediums while
experimenting in bold abstract painting styles, expressionism and surrealism.
Her work remains in a constant state of change.
Her paintings are a statement and a story, which is at
once refreshingly simple, and at the same time hauntingly complex. Today, her
works in oil reflect her passion for human feeling and experience invoking from
the viewer a personal interpretation, unique to each piece.
She has exhibited her work in shows and galleries
throughout the country. Her paintings are widely held in collections in U.S. and
abroad.
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"Zara, posing
for a picture", original painting in
oil on canvas
by Nadia.
"A girl with
an orange hat, purple background. From the series of
"naive people"."
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Artist Statement:
"Naive people" is what I call my latest
series of paintings. I have been asked a lot where the images coming
from; Well, they come from their own world, where they live in harmony
and peace with everything around, and themselves. They look at me from
the canvas and make me smile, I hope you too.
I call them naive people because they
contain innocence and purity of a child, but in the same time, they also
have wisdom of nature, where they have animals for their friends and
mushroom for their hats. They find happiness in the simple things. They
seem content, sometimes melancholy, but it is only a light melancholy.
I think they are just a gentle side of
our soul.
There is a symbolism in some of my
paintings: for example elaborate hats are their ideas, dreams,
imagination and thoughts. Some times you can see seeds, which symbolize
the continuation of life.

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