The connection between Bulgaria, "Dali's Moustache" and Picasso is a topic that could remain widely discussed in the next few years, and perhaps even decades. The reason for this is not related to new technologies and artificial intelligence, nor to discoveries in the genealogical connections of the great artists of the 20th century, but to a Bulgarian woman - the artist Anna Mutavska.
"The general idea was about unity in this callous world, in which one of the values is love. Each side of the painting depicted a different aspect of it and a different plot. In my childhood, I was impressed by Claude Monet and how at first nothing is understood in his paintings, but when you look more closely, everything becomes clear. There was wind in them. This wind that should always be present in everything a person does. Even if one sells chewing gum, it should be there!" says Anna Mutavska.
Photos: BTA, Desislava Shapkarova, Facebook/Anna Mutavska
English publication Rositsa Petkova
The ancient Thracian epic comes to life on June 28 to the sounds of captivating music and spectacular choreography in the amphitheatre of Cultural and Tourist Center Aquae Calidae in Burgas , the Academia Orphica informs. In the..
Bulgaria will be represented by two short films at the EU Film Days 2025, which will take place in the Japanese cities of Tokyo, Nagoya, Fukuoka and Kyoto. According to the Facebook page of the Bulgarian Embassy in Japan, this year's..
To celebrate 40 years since its inception, the Summer Opera Festival ‘Stage of the Centuries’ in Veliko Tarnovo has put together a rich programme. The programme features opera, ballet and symphonic music masterpieces. There will also be musicals and..
On July 1, 1925, at 4:00 pm, the curtain rose at the Old Theatre in Stara Zagora for the first performance of Bulgaria's first opera company outside the..
An exhibition dedicated to the art of the Bulgarian artist Georgi Baev will open at the Bulgarian Cultural Institute in Prague on 3 July at 6 p.m. The..
+359 2 9336 661