Serving House: A Journal of Literary Arts
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Visual Arts
SHJ Issue 18
Spring 2018

[Three Paintings]

by Vera Gubnitskaia


Abstract 1002, watercolor painting by Vera Gubnitskaia

Abstract 1002
Original watercolor painting

Copyright © by Vera Gubnitskaia. All rights reserved.
Appears here with artist’s permission
(this marks the work’s first publication).

 

Boardwalk, watercolor painting by Vera Gubnitskaia

Boardwalk
Original watercolor painting

Copyright © by Vera Gubnitskaia. All rights reserved.
Image downloaded here from the artist’s
online gallery with her permission.

 

Standing, watercolor painting by Vera Gubnitskaia

Standing
Original watercolor painting

Copyright © by Vera Gubnitskaia. All rights reserved.
Appears here with artist’s permission
(this marks the work’s first publication).

 

SHJ Issue 18
Spring 2018

Vera Gubnitskaia

is an artist as well as a writer, freelance editor, and reference librarian. She has lived and worked in Russia and the United States, and holds degrees from Moscow Institute of Culture and Florida State University. She has contributed chapters to several professional anthologies, co-edited multiple anthologies for McFarland and Scarecrow publishers, and written indexes for Rowman and Littlefield, Bantam, and McFarland books. Her book reviews have been published in Journal of International Women’s Studies, Small Press Review, and Florida Library Youth Program Newsletter.

Gubnitskaia’s original watercolor paintings have been exhibited at the Still Point Arts Gallery, Global Portrait Exhibit (Spring 2018), and have been published in Still Point Arts Quarterly and Front Porch Review. She has participated in art shows in Central Florida and has designed cover art for several poetry collections (including, most recently, A Matter of Selection by Carol Smallwood).

For more information, visit the artist’s website: http://vera-gubnitskaia-art.blogspot.com/.


“...we have been born here to witness and celebrate. We wonder at our purpose for living. Our purpose
is to perceive the fantastic. Why have a universe if there is no audience?” — Ray Bradbury