Anastasia Gladkova

Joined Artfinder: July 2025

Artworks for sale: 5

United States

About Anastasia Gladkova

 
 
  • Biography

    NASKA is a visual artist based in Florida, originally from Moscow, Russia. She received classical art training at a fine art college, and her work blends academic painting techniques with surreal, emotionally charged narratives.

    Working primarily in oils, NASKA explores the fragile, inner world of women through symbolic and often dreamlike imagery. Her paintings are meditations on vulnerability—not as weakness, but as a quiet form of power. Delicate textures, porcelain surfaces, and familiar domestic objects become carriers of memory, longing, and identity.

    At the heart of her work is the idea that every woman holds within her a tender, imaginative self—an inner “princess”—often buried under social roles and expectations. Through this recurring motif, Anastasia reflects on the universal tension between who we are inside and how the world sees us.

    Her visual language is both intimate and surreal. Whether she paints a broken egg, a porcelain figurine, or a childlike character suspended in silence, each image becomes a poetic vessel for emotional truth.

    NASKA invites the viewer into these personal, symbolic spaces—where fragility is honored, inner voices are heard, and softness becomes a strength.

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Biography

NASKA is a visual artist based in Florida, originally from Moscow, Russia. She received classical art training at a fine art college, and her work blends academic painting techniques with surreal, emotionally charged narratives.

Working primarily in oils, NASKA explores the fragile, inner world of women through symbolic and often dreamlike imagery. Her paintings are meditations on vulnerability—not as weakness, but as a quiet form of power. Delicate textures, porcelain surfaces, and familiar domestic objects become carriers of memory, longing, and identity.

At the heart of her work is the idea that every woman holds within her a tender, imaginative self—an inner “princess”—often buried under social roles and expectations. Through this recurring motif, Anastasia reflects on the universal tension between who we are inside and how the world sees us.

Her visual language is both intimate and surreal. Whether she paints a broken egg, a porcelain figurine, or a childlike character suspended in silence, each image becomes a poetic vessel for emotional truth.

NASKA invites the viewer into these personal, symbolic spaces—where fragility is honored, inner voices are heard, and softness becomes a strength.