
Warriors
An Expressionist will say, "I saw it, I lived it," when describing her painting, because an Expressionist does not paint what she does not internalize. Expressionism therefore values personal explanations.
"I was inspired by myself, my search for my life path and essence, my desire to reveal an essential and spiritual art in my journey of creation, and my being an existential warrior." Dear Turkish writer and psychologist Prof. Dr. From Dogan Cüceloglu and his book "The Warrior", from the book "Women Running with Wolves" by the famous writer and poet Clarissa Pinkola Estés, from Psychiatrist Carl Gustav Jung's archetypal theories and Primitive Art, as well as from my Master's Thesis I wrote about Expressionism Art Movement I also took advantage. ''
Goknil Gumus Sungurtekin
Expressive instant rhythmic brush strokes, enthusiastic use of color, formal and color contrasts, and exuberant, meanin expressive figures that turn into a powerful visual feast created with complementary colors that create contrast.
Warrior II
The adventure of this painting, which started in life as a strong sacrifice and a visually delicious victim, has changed and transformed over the years, gaining a strong inner enthusiasm, passion and meaning with the courage and determination to internalize it in the artist's consciousness.
She defines the "Warrior" as a free figure who has an existential stance in harmony with the aura and life around her, with her view of her primitive nature and interiority, the expressive meaning of warrior, and who succeeds in "being herself". According to the artist, "Warrior" is the state of being in the moment, aware, centered, awakened, intuitive, "being yourself", completely freely "being as it is" by taking your own inner strength, value, love from yourself.
Being yourself in a world that works day and night to make you different from others means fighting the hardest battle in the world. Once this war has begun, It never ends anymore...
E.E. Cummings
































