Alona, please tell us about your creative journey. How did you start engaging in art?
Even as a child, I loved to draw, but my parents didn’t want me to take it seriously, so my creative journey began after I turned 30. Initially, it was an experiment; I worked with polymer clay and decoupage. Then I started painting with oil paints on canvas. The collection of paintings began with just one painting, which was an Angel in the form of an alien. Then a whole collection emerged, called “Others.” Each painting depicting an alien symbolizes a person who is somewhat different from others. You know, everyone has been told at some point that you’re not like everyone else, or you’re from another planet, or born in the wrong time, you’re an alien. And these paintings are about that: they are images of women who are very feminine, or strong men, or devoted family members, scientists, travelers, dreamers. In other words, people who are very different from others.
You have many different styles of work. How do you find inspiration for each of them?
For me, art is generally like an experiment, meaning I catch an idea and try to transform it on canvas. I constantly work with new materials, try new plots, techniques. I paint with oil paints, acrylics, watercolors. If I don’t want to paint something anymore, I switch to another technique, or papier-mâché, or clay, or something else interesting. So, in general, art is my life. Now I believe that it’s even just a way of life. The feeling of this world doesn’t let me stop at one theme or direction. I follow the flow that leads me and try to transform it on canvas.
Which artists or art movements have had the greatest influence on you?
I think that from the very beginning of my painting, my creative path, I was influenced by Salvador Dalí, Pablo Picasso. I really like Van Gogh, there are many artists I like, but above all, I love reading their life stories and how they developed their creativity, their paths. This is very interesting to me. Art movements. I like surrealism, naïvism, abstraction, expressive techniques. That is, when with one motion you sweep and the paint flies onto the canvas. With splashes, you don’t know where it will fly and what will be created, it’s like some kind of magic for me, it’s a feeling of happiness, probably, like in childhood.
How do you choose themes for your works? Do you have favorite plots or motifs?
I choose themes for my works randomly, or in conversations with friends, or an idea might come to me that needs to be realized. There are many. Each painting is its own story, and therefore I can’t say which themes or motifs I choose because each painting is a completely different story. But I already have several collections. Some paintings are unique in their plot or motif, but that doesn’t mean they will remain unique. That is, someday, perhaps, I will return and paint another collection, maybe I will, maybe not. So, it’s always a reason for me to return to one theme or another.
Do you participate in competitions and exhibitions? What experience have you gained from these events?
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