
About the Artist
I am an artist from Croatia. I hold a master’s degree in Comparative Literature and Sociology, as well as a high school diploma in Interior Design. Through my art, I try to weave together all of my passions and the skills I’ve gained throughout my education.
Style
I am in love with exploring minimalism infused with maximum color impact. I like to think of my designs as bold, daring, and eye-catching—sometimes personal, sometimes seductive, but always radically alive, like an explosion of color and feeling. I see my art as a continuous act of storytelling, always leaving space for the next chapter, for growth and transformation. While I’m still exploring new variations of my minimalistic yet color-rich style, there are a few recurring motifs that always call me back.


Motifs
The most constant presence in my work is women. I find the female body breathtaking and worth celebrating. I love how its curves interact with shadow and light—seductively claiming and freeing space, gracing us with its presence in rhythmic waves.
Another recurring theme comes from my personal life, especially my little escapes to the sea. I like to take myself—and the viewer—back to the places I’ve been, recreating the emotions I felt there. As cliché as it sounds, I often use art as a form of escapism, a moment of peace and presence in our busy, fast-moving world.
Evolving
In high school, I chose an art program, thinking I wanted to be a painter—only to soon realize that working with a brush didn’t feel natural to me. Drawing with ink, however, did. I was fascinated by the strength of black ink and the precision of clean lines, and I had many opportunities to explore this while studying Interior Design. Unfortunately, my love for drawing faded under the rigid, unforgiving demands of straight, measured lines, which eventually pushed me to step away from art for a while and pursue a different educational path.


I slowly rediscovered my love for black ink in my early college years, giving myself permission to create loose, freehand drawings. This led me to explore single-line art—a style I came to love deeply, using it to celebrate the curves of the female body and erotic poses. In my final years of college, I wanted my work to look more “professional,” which led me to transition into digital art, specifically working in Procreate. At first, I was shy about adding color, but eventually, those bursts of color became my defining feature. I fell in love with bright, alive colors—the way they speak to me in excitement, simulating radical presence, confidence, and the ongoing feeling of lived pleasure.