Podcast in English
Text size
Bulgarian National Radio © 2024 All Rights Reserved

When the bird flies and the horse gallops with the wind, then art is born

4
Photo: Facebook /Plamen Kostov - ART

Petya Peeva and Plamen Kostov get inspiration from shapes, colors and light and shadows in nature when they draw their paintings. Their works are like an ethereal imprint of animate and inanimate nature on the white canvas. At first glance you sense life, the bird has spread its wings, the horse is racing with the wind, the ripe fruit looks like it has just been sliced and seduces the eye with its sweetness. We learned from the conversation with the artists that it took them many years to upgrade their ideas, techniques and life views, in order to achieve success.


“At the moment, there is nothing concrete in fine arts that is modern. Everything is used, as long as it is done with due measure and talent "- this is what Plamen Kostov says about his artistic duo with Petya Peeva. At the beginning of November this year they unveiled their first exhibition in Sofia, entitled "Together", not only to demonstrate their creative work in tandem:

"The idea is much more comprehensive than the word itself", says Petya Peeva. " I want people to be more united, to be in harmony with nature and feelpositive emotions. We are calling for unity, because recently we have become alienated from each other. I prefer to emphasize the beauty. We paint together and look at each other’s paintings. We often criticize each other, but we also support each other. We have been working and living together for more than 15 years".


Petya and Plamen graduated from the University of Veliko Tarnovo, majoring in painting. Their paintings can be seen in many places in Bulgaria, mainly in Veliko Tarnovo, Stara Zagora and Sofia, but also in Norway, Canada, Russia, Greece and many other places.

“We have not lacked inspiration during the social isolation this year. When we are out in the nature, we get plenty of inspiration and come up with different ideas- says Plamen Kolev – I usually paint horses, but I also like birds, landscapes and the different moods they bring. We have favorite artists and we follow them on the social networks. I grew up with paintings by Levitan and Aivazovsky and I believe that there is hardly anyone who does not like them. There are many good contemporary Russian artists, especially those who paint with watercolor paints, whom I admire, although I paint mainly with acrylic paints.”


"I was born in Russia. My mother is Russian and my father is Bulgarian. I have lived most of my life in Bulgaria, but I am also breastfed by the culture of the Russian country. I associate it with my childhood, with some wonderful snowy winters, many friends and, strange as it may sound, with a lot of warmth. In Bulgaria, as an author and artist, I am mainly interested in the Bulgarian village, the Bulgarian traditional way of life. I like ordinary elderly people, carts, chickens, houses and everything typical of the everyday life. I lived in Maglizh, which is a small town and these things are quite familiar and dear to me. That’s what I like to paint. I associate the beauty around us with life in a Bulgarian village. ”


English version: Kostdain Atanasov

Photos: Facebook /Plamen Kostov – ART, sofia-art-galleries.com


Последвайте ни и в Google News Showcase, за да научите най-важното от деня!
Listen to the daily news from Bulgaria presented in "Bulgaria Today" podcast, available in Spotify.

Gallery

More from category

Professor Krassimir Stantchev

Prof. Krassimir Stantchev: Language can be used for any purpose, from promoting peace to declaring war

"The dying fire is often rekindled thanks to a few remaining embers."  With these warm words, Slavic philology professor Krassimir Stantchev inspires hope that the fading interest in the Bulgarian alphabet, the Bulgarian language and Bulgarian culture..

published on 7/9/24 2:10 PM

“Land of roses”, a film with a message of hope that we can accept people with disabilities

2021 population census data from Bulgaria show that there are 654,547 people living in the country with an acknowledged permanently reduced capacity for work or degree of disability. Of them, 22,248 are children, and 632,299 are 16 or over. 578,517..

published on 7/9/24 8:00 AM
Nayden Todorov

The people working in culture are not forming society’s taste, minister of culture says

“Ways have been found, in a unique way, to finance each sector in culture the wrong way. Artists are now working as if they are in a factory, and instead of forming society’s taste, they are forced to cater to this taste so as to earn more money,”..

published on 7/8/24 9:10 AM