I wonder what it gives you? The lobster's extravagant, evil-smiling melons have evil smiles, the lemons are full of golden light, the grapes have layered colors, the flowers and butterfly moths have terrifying colors, these are the elements of the painting world of home Sabrina Bockler. Compared with the still life paintings of the Dutch Golden Age masters, the brushstrokes and picture elements are more contemporary and decadent.
Sabrina Bockler In 2011, he received a bachelor's degree in Fine Arts from the Parsons School of Design and now works in New York. When she was a child, she often went to her mother's hometown in , Poland, to spend the summer vacation. Because she could not speak language, she could only use painting to crack loneliness. When he grew up, he was influenced by art in museums in Manhattan and Warsaw.
Her works are easily equated with still life artists of the Dutch Golden Age, such as Balthasar van der Ast, Ambrosius Bosschaert, Rachel Ruysch, etc. In fact, she was also deeply influenced by the new objectivism launched by the German art world in the 1920s, including Franz Sedlacek, Christian Schad, Aenne Biermann, etc. Many of the inspirations for paintings by Sabrina Bockler come from cooking and housekeeping magazines in the 1950s and 1960s, including the 1950s and 1980s, including the 1950s and 1980s House of America, Beautiful House, Betty Crocker, Food and Music and Playboy. These magazines make the dishes a wonder with complex recipes and exquisite platters.