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Painting, Oil on Canvas
Size: 182.9 W x 152.4 H x 3.8 D cm
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“Wildflowers” is a large-scale oil on canvas painting that bridges Impressionism and Expressionism, striking what feels to me like the ideal balance between representation and abstraction. It echoes my early roots in Impressionism but reimagines them in a more contemporary form—looser, bolder, and m...
2025
Painting, Oil on Canvas
One-of-a-kind Artwork
182.9 W x 152.4 H x 3.8 D cm
Yes
Not Framed
Certificate is Included
Ships in a Crate
No
Shipping is included in price.
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Ships in a wooden crate for additional protection of heavy or oversized artworks. Artists are responsible for packaging and adhering to Saatchi Art’s packaging guidelines.
United States.
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Maria Karpenko won a national art competition in elementary school in Germany and started painting oil on canvas at the age of 9. She had her first solo exhibition at the age of 10, selling more than a dozen paintings. Local newspapers profiled her in articles with titles like "A 'Phenomenon': First Exhibition at Age 10." She had another solo exhibition a couple years later, shortly before her family moved to Canada. While attending high school, she had her third solo exhibition and has been working on commissions ever since. Before Maria started painting, she spent about two years visiting museums and galleries in Europe with her family. She was enthralled by French Impressionism and chose Claude Monet as her mentor. Maria’s parents took her to Claude Monet’s house and garden in Giverny, France. She studied his work and the work of other impressionists by flipping through art books countless times. She copied a few of Monet's paintings to learn and practice his technique. The Walk (Argenteuil) (1875) and Poppies (1873) are among the paintings she copied. She quickly moved on to her own paintings—mostly landscapes and floral compositions. In 2018, Maria started to explore Abstract Expressionism. During the COVID-19 pandemic, she tried acrylic paints for the first time and fell in love with them. They give her new ways to capture the emotions a place or a moment evokes. Their drying speed forces her to work faster and in a more "expressive" and spontaneous way. She has learned that the process of an Abstract Expressionism acrylic painting is as much part of the finished painting as the painting itself.
Artist featured by Saatchi Art in a collection
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