My work draws from the visual overload of our reality, sometimes quite unfiltered and without judgment. My language is that of Baroque and Classical painting, shaped by my childhood surrounded by reproductions and my long-standing love of museums. It all probably started with my fascination with the Italian Renaissance and Baroque – and for decades I have been visiting museums and engaging visually with masterpieces. I study composition, dramaturgy, the use of light, the meaning of shadows and the many nuances in between. I also share the joy of painting skin and the human body and can identify with artists who clearly preferred skin to drapery, and I don’t understand why some choose the folds of fabric instead. For a long time I avoided looking at still lifes. I thought I wouldn’t be interested in them or I believed they were just beautiful – all those flowers and butterflies. That perception changed when I saw the still lifes of Jan Winnix in the Wallace collection. Those paintings captivated me and I am still influenced by them. Winnix is somehow different – his work seems free to me, unencumbered by the obligation to depict fruits or vegetables, wealth or a successful hunt. His sense of drama and physicality is closer to what I am trying to capture, especially in his relationship to light.
Andreana Dobreva


