Materials of Transparency and Emotional Trace
The visual language of Petreska’s work is defined by transparency, layering, and emotional residue. Photography serves as a starting point, often combined with materials such as glass, resin, leaves, and feathers. These elements are chosen not for decorative effect but for their capacity to hold and reveal traces of presence. Transparency becomes a conceptual bridge, linking physical properties to emotional states. What can be seen clearly, what remains partially obscured, and what is preserved against disappearance all carry symbolic weight. Her frequent use of self-portraiture introduces intimacy, inviting viewers into moments of reflection rather than performance. These images are rarely static; they suggest immersion, suspension, or quiet tension. Through careful layering, Petreska creates works that reward close looking, where meaning emerges through subtle shifts in light, texture, and material interaction.
Water has become an increasingly significant element in her practice, particularly through underwater photography. This technique allows the body to appear transformed, softened, or momentarily unmoored from gravity. Water reflects, distorts, and conceals, making it an ideal medium for exploring presence and emotion. Gestures captured beneath the surface feel both vulnerable and resilient, shaped by resistance and flow. This environment introduces unpredictability, requiring attentiveness and adaptability during the creative process. The resulting images carry a sense of suspension, where time feels slowed and emotions surface gently. Water functions as both collaborator and filter, shaping how the body is seen and felt. Its presence reinforces Petreska’s ongoing interest in balance, especially between tenderness and strength, and between control and release.
Across all materials, her focus remains on emotional trace rather than formal perfection. Glass and resin preserve delicate elements, suggesting care and containment, while organic materials introduce fragility and impermanence. These choices reflect an understanding that emotions, like materials, respond to conditions and handling. Petreska allows this responsiveness to guide the work, embracing outcomes that feel honest rather than polished. Music often accompanies her process, particularly singer-songwriters whose intimacy and storytelling influence the rhythm and atmosphere of her studio practice. This auditory presence shapes pacing and mood, creating a supportive environment for reflection. Together, these influences form a cohesive approach where material, sound, and emotion interact quietly. The result is work that feels grounded and attentive, inviting viewers to sense what remains after moments pass.
