Upcoming Exhibitions

Browse Elena’s online gallery to view recent works and find details about forthcoming shows, as she continues to merge painting techniques into evocative color studies.

A refined exhibition announcement scene: a sleek, matte postcard featuring an abstract painting by Elena Ogloblina rests atop a stack of catalogs on a dark charcoal linen-covered table. The postcard shows a fragment of a composition with layered turquoise, rust, and soft cream tones, intersected by delicate graphite lines. Beside it lie a silver fountain pen and a minimal, embossed gallery invitation card with subtle blind-debossed text, partially in view. A single sprig of eucalyptus extends from the top edge, adding a muted green accent. Warm, directional late-afternoon light from the right grazes the paper surfaces, emphasizing textures and casting long, soft shadows. Shot at a slight three-quarter angle with a shallow depth of field that blurs the background catalogs, the photographic, clean composition conveys sophistication and anticipation for upcoming exhibitions.
A large abstract canvas leaning against a pristine white gallery wall, its surface alive with layered mixed media: translucent washes of cobalt blue and umber, sharp geometric lines in charcoal, and subtle gold leaf fragments catching the light. The painting rests on a smooth concrete floor scattered with a few carefully placed paint tubes and palette knives, suggesting an artist’s studio that doubles as a viewing space. Soft, diffused daylight from a high skylight bathes the scene, creating gentle reflections on the metallic accents and tender shadows along the wall. Captured at eye level with a slightly off-center composition and shallow depth of field, the focus remains on the rich textures and complex color relationships. The photographic realism and minimalist setting evoke a sophisticated, contemplative atmosphere, ideal for a portfolio homepage hero image.

Artist Statement

Elena Ogloblina explores color, light, and texture through mixed techniques, weaving memory and landscape into intimate, vibrant canvases that invite slow looking and personal interpretation.