
This painting by Valentina Petrova is a charming example of still life, where each floral cluster seems alive and vibrant. The artist employs a rich palette, combining deep greens and reds with lighter white and cream tones to create visual harmony. The vase, adorned with abstract motifs, adds an exotic flair to the composition, while the flowers within appear as lively beings reaching upwards. The play of light and shadow on the background adds depth and texture, highlighting the distinct features of each petal and leaf. This still life invites the viewer to appreciate the fleeting beauty of nature and its fragility, framed within the artist's skillful technique. Petrova successfully combines elements of realism with a touch of abstraction, creating a piece attractive for both aesthetic appreciation and investment.
Valentina Petrova
Graphic artist. In 1948 she graduated from the graphic arts faculty of the Repin Institute, defending her thesis with distinction on illustrations for V. Gorbatov's book 'The Unconquered'. Since 1948 — a member of the Union of Artists of the USSR. Since 1968 — Merited Artist of the RSFSR. She worked at Leningrad publishing houses and participated in exhibitions from 1950. She began working as an illustrator at Detgiz while still a student, and from 1950 created books in co-authorship with her husband at various publishing houses. She also had a lithographic studio where she created many autolithographs, including the 'Blockade' cycle of 1985, part of which she donated to the State Museum of the History of St. Petersburg. The large-format sheets of the cycle are a synthesis of impressions from the blockade years in a large compositional form and complex tonality. The composition 'Lecture on Art in an Air-Raid Shelter, Winter 1942' is particularly notable — it glorifies the heights of the human spirit, conveying the emotional authenticity of a time when deprivation and hunger could not prevent people from believing in beauty. Awards: Certificate of Honor from the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet of the RSFSR for creative work in book art, 30 April 1966. 1965 — Gold Medal at the Sholokhov competition at the Leipzig Exhibition. 1969 — First Prize of the Union of Artists of the USSR for a series of works about Lenin.