"Wild Rose" feels like a reflection of a tender, unspoken emotion. The rose, standing alone, carries a quiet vulnerability—its soft, pale pink petals whisper of gentle beauty, but also of fragility. I was thinking about the quiet moments of introspection we all have, the kind where beauty and sadness blur together. The rose isn’t perfect, it isn’t fully open—it holds something back, just like we often do, guarding its most delicate parts. This painting holds a bit of that space, where tenderness meets solitude, where beauty isn’t loud or obvious but quietly lingers, waiting to be seen by those who stop long enough to notice.
Wild Rose
Alexandra KAZAKOVA.
Alexandra KAZAKOVA was born in USSR, from 2005 she lives and works in Paris. She started her artistic training at the age of 12 at the Russian School of Traditional Decorative Art where she studied decorative painting of wooden objects. About 10 years ago she turned to photography and for the last two years she have been concentrated mainly on drawing and painting. Alexandra's art is a journey through cultures inspired by her encounters. She have taken various courses in painting, drawing and calligraphy drawing and calligraphy with artists close to her artistic sensibility. Alexandra's favorite medium is oil painting, and she enjoys working with a palette knife. This allows her to create texture and depth in her paintings, giving them a dynamic and expressive quality. Her art is about exploration of the human experience. It is a journey of self-discovery, a dialogue with inner self, and a way of uncovering the deepest processes of the unconscious.