Victoria Andreeva
Viktoria Andreeva is a Vienna-based art photographer and visual artist, born and raised in Bulgaria.
As a former ballet dancer, she works with the body as her primary formal and expressive element, distorting or transforming the figure to blur the boundary between reality and illusion, the natural and the artificial.
Andreeva’s visual world is characterized by a surreal, sculptural aesthetic with carefully controlled light and materiality. Her projects range from staged portraits to series exploring movement, texture, and symbolic pairs of opposites.
During her studies, she began an extensive book project in collaboration with dancers at the Wiener Staatsoper, combining photographs with interviews and insights into the world of ballet.
Viktoria Andreeva
Viktoria Andreeva is a Vienna-based art photographer and visual artist, born and raised in Bulgaria.
As a former ballet dancer, she works with the body as her primary formal and expressive element, distorting or transforming the figure to blur the boundary between reality and illusion, the natural and the artificial.
Andreeva’s visual world is characterized by a surreal, sculptural aesthetic with carefully controlled light and materiality. Her projects range from staged portraits to series exploring movement, texture, and symbolic pairs of opposites.
During her studies, she began an extensive book project in collaboration with dancers at the Wiener Staatsoper, combining photographs with interviews and insights into the world of ballet.
Victoria Andreeva
Viktoria Andreeva is a Vienna-based art photographer and visual artist, born and raised in Bulgaria.
As a former ballet dancer, she works with the body as her primary formal and expressive element, distorting or transforming the figure to blur the boundary between reality and illusion, the natural and the artificial.
Andreeva’s visual world is characterized by a surreal, sculptural aesthetic with carefully controlled light and materiality. Her projects range from staged portraits to series exploring movement, texture, and symbolic pairs of opposites.
During her studies, she began an extensive book project in collaboration with dancers at the Wiener Staatsoper, combining photographs with interviews and insights into the world of ballet.

