In Aphrodite with Roses, Valeriya Veron turns to the classical tradition with an academic drawing from ancient Greek sculpture, bringing the Greek Goddess of Beauty and Love into dialogue with the living world. The bust emerges with quiet authority, her stone features serene and timeless, hair gathered softly beneath a cloth. Every plane of the face reflects disciplined observation, the careful study of form, shadow, and structure that defines the academic school. Below her, living roses bloom in soft watercolor washes, their petals loose and organic against the cool precision of the marble above. Immortal beauty rendered in stone meets mortal beauty unfolding in bloom, and the contrast between them is the heart of the work.
Valeriya Veron works the 28″ x 21″ sheet in graphite pencil and watercolor, moving fluently between two very different demands. The graphite carries the sculptural weight of the bust with confident tonal control. The watercolor roses shift into something softer and more ephemeral below, their pale greens and creamy whites applied with a light, unhurried hand. Aphrodite with Roses honors the academic tradition while breathing something tender and alive into it, a reminder that even the most enduring ideals of beauty find their truest expression not in marble, but in things that grow, bloom, and pass.