Zinaida Ivanovna Dubodel is a talented artist. She was born in 1953, in Mirnopol, in Odessa region. She has lived in Mezhdurechensk since 1955. She has been painting since 2000. Since 2002, she has regularly taken part in painting competitions and exhibitions.
Her works have featured in more than 50 personal exhibitions in cities in Siberia, including Mezhdurechensk, Krasnoyarsk, Abakan, Kemerovo, Belogorsk, Osinniki, and Novokuznetsk.
In 2009 she participated in Fest-Naiv, an international festival and exhibition of naive art, which toured the Golden Ring cities for a year.
In her work Zinaida Dubodel focuses on the striking landscapes of her region of Mountain Shoria and other regions of Siberia. She is excited and inspired by the beauty of the natural world. She always paints from life, which allows her to capture the wealth and charm of the region’s unspoiled nature as faithfully as possible. Her paintings resonate with all who see them, filling them with a sense of limitless love for the natural world.
In The Eve of Winter we the artist depicts an autumn landscape, in all its dazzling beauty. The first thing that catches the viewer’s attention is a tree with copper-colored leaves, on the left of the canvas. In the foreground there is an area of tall, dry grass. And in the distance the tall snow-capped mountain peaks graze the sky.
On the steep rocky slopes we can still see some green vegetation. Several light clouds are drifting across the pale blue sky. The whole scene is full of light and air. The canvas is strikingly bright and full of intense color. The artist vividly expresses the mood of nature at the time when its inevitable death is accompanied by a burst of vivid color.
In Shoria, the first frosts, as depicted in this painting, come at the end of September of beginning of October. This is a land of harsh winters. The native inhabitants, the Shorians, or Kuznetsk Tatars, believed that with the arrival of the winter cold the good spirits left the earth and only returned on the spring solstice. And in winter dark and evil forces hold sway over the land, entering into people’s homes, and bringing them unhappiness and doing them harm.
As the viewer gazes at Zinaida Dubodel’s painting, they can feel the breath of the approaching Siberian winter, with its frost and snow.
Her works have featured in more than 50 personal exhibitions in cities in Siberia, including Mezhdurechensk, Krasnoyarsk, Abakan, Kemerovo, Belogorsk, Osinniki, and Novokuznetsk.
In 2009 she participated in Fest-Naiv, an international festival and exhibition of naive art, which toured the Golden Ring cities for a year.
In her work Zinaida Dubodel focuses on the striking landscapes of her region of Mountain Shoria and other regions of Siberia. She is excited and inspired by the beauty of the natural world. She always paints from life, which allows her to capture the wealth and charm of the region’s unspoiled nature as faithfully as possible. Her paintings resonate with all who see them, filling them with a sense of limitless love for the natural world.
In The Eve of Winter we the artist depicts an autumn landscape, in all its dazzling beauty. The first thing that catches the viewer’s attention is a tree with copper-colored leaves, on the left of the canvas. In the foreground there is an area of tall, dry grass. And in the distance the tall snow-capped mountain peaks graze the sky.
On the steep rocky slopes we can still see some green vegetation. Several light clouds are drifting across the pale blue sky. The whole scene is full of light and air. The canvas is strikingly bright and full of intense color. The artist vividly expresses the mood of nature at the time when its inevitable death is accompanied by a burst of vivid color.
In Shoria, the first frosts, as depicted in this painting, come at the end of September of beginning of October. This is a land of harsh winters. The native inhabitants, the Shorians, or Kuznetsk Tatars, believed that with the arrival of the winter cold the good spirits left the earth and only returned on the spring solstice. And in winter dark and evil forces hold sway over the land, entering into people’s homes, and bringing them unhappiness and doing them harm.
As the viewer gazes at Zinaida Dubodel’s painting, they can feel the breath of the approaching Siberian winter, with its frost and snow.