Silvia Dimitrova
The topic of this article may not meet Wikipedia's notability guideline for biographies. (December 2021) |
This article needs additional citations for verification. (December 2021) |
Silvia Dimitrova | |
---|---|
Birth name | Silvia Dimitrova Rea |
Born | 1970 (age 51–52) |
Origin | Pleven, Bulgaria |
Occupation(s) | painter |
Years active | 1989–present |
Website | silviadimitrova.co.uk |
Silvia Dimitrova (Bulgarian: Силвия Димитрова) (born 1970 in Pleven) is an icon painter. She won a place at the prestigious School of Applied Arts at Troyan at the age of 13. She graduated in 1989. She then studied icon painting in Sofia under the tuition of Georgi Tchouchev, the grand master of Bulgarian icons, and was invited to exhibit her work in Alexander Nevsky Cathedral, Sofia, amongst the elite group of icon painters.
She held a successful solo exhibition in Paris, in the Cultural Centre Edmond Rostand, Rueil-Malmaison in 1997. In the spring of 1999 she was commissioned by Downside Abbey to paint the Icon of St Benedict, Wells. At the beginning of 2000 Silvia worked as an artist-in-residence at Wells Cathedral with a commission to paint the Fourteen Stations of the Cross as a project for the Millennium. In the same year she was married, in Wells Cathedral, to Simon Potter, a house master at Downside School, Somerset. During this time she was also nominated and shortlisted for the European Women of Achievement Awards 2000 for contributions to the Arts. Since then Silvia has been working on both private and public commissions including St Paul's Cathedral, London and Hertford College, Oxford.
She works in the traditional technique of icon painting - egg tempera on wood, with her work covering the whole spectrum of traditional Bulgarian icons and original works.
Notable Exhibitions & Commissions[]
1997
- Centre Culturel Edmond Rostand, Paris, France
2001
- Courcoux & Courcoux, Stockbridge
2002
- London Art Fair, Islington
- St Bede Centre, Downside School
- Courcoux & Courcoux, Stockbridge
2003
- London Art Fair, London
- Courcoux & Courcoux, Hampshire
- St Mary, Islington, London
- Bath Society of Artists, Victoria Art Gallery, Bath
- Art Seiller galerie, St Paul de Vence, France
2004
- Mas d’Artigny, St Paul de Vence, France
- L’Espace Int. Sculpture et Beaux-Arts, Orléans, France
- St Mary, Yatton, Bristol
2005
Comments on Dimitrova's art[]
"Silvia's icons express the continuing vitality of an ancient tradition of religious art. Following the rules of her discipline, their colour and attention to detail bring the saints and the mysteries of our faith to life in our own day. Her first icon in this country, the icon of St Benedict, was a new departure bringing Eastern iconography to a fresh understanding of the life of the patron of Western monasticism."
Dom David Foster O.S.B
"Her pictures embrace joyously colourful patterns, magical symbolism and deep serenity. They articulate a world of inner light and love, of a poetically mystical life that is both of nature and of humanity. It is an inspirational view of a painter who uses her ancient national traditions to celebrate the beauty and joys of life within the contemporary world."
Richard Leachman – Artworlds.
"Silvia's paintings are on the theme of love and have all the richness, intensity and exuberance of her own personality. Her immediate success is only the beginning of what we believe will be a highly successful career."
Ian Courcoux – Courcoux & Courcoux.
See also[]
References[]
- Alan Ogden Revelations of Byzantium, Appendix. April 2001 ISBN 973-9432-32-8
External links[]
- 1970 births
- Bulgarian painters
- Living people
- People from Pleven
- Bulgarian women painters
- 21st-century women artists