An out of body experienceBerta Negari is best known for her Contemporary free flow abstracts creating zen-like floral images.
Through her works, Negari has manifested infinite dimensions within herself to create her own artistic vocabulary.
To say that she is prolific is a mild statement. Negari produces works with an intensity and magnitue that churns out work after work involuntarily. Perhaps this can be best described as an “out of body” sort of an experience which propels her to paint volumes. Negari started painting in the later part of her life, and with a reason. |
Recent Press
"I have created over 3000 works of abstraction and I am now exploring the possibility of digitalizing it with a Digital Art curator and hope to take this project forward. I would love to see my works as an immersive and interactive walk-in experience that can transport one into a world of 3 D artistic medium."

Negari’s works are a spontaneous overflow of powerful feelings and emotions recollected in tranquility. She looks within a world of emotional and psychological states rather than confronting the fluid world of seeming realism. She explores her mind, spirit and imagination to germinate imagery. Thus free from representational convention, her process and philosophy make her works "timeless" and "enduring."
Standing at the threshold of life, the call to paint came late, but she made up for the time lost by producing a breathtaking 3,000 works in three years. However, the transition to where she is right now did not happen overnight. Negari painted for hours, days and even months without a break. Her way of expressing and understanding her life was evident from her early works, which were a free flow textual imagery of her own emotions.
Standing at the threshold of life, the call to paint came late, but she made up for the time lost by producing a breathtaking 3,000 works in three years. However, the transition to where she is right now did not happen overnight. Negari painted for hours, days and even months without a break. Her way of expressing and understanding her life was evident from her early works, which were a free flow textual imagery of her own emotions.