Dentist Paints Art on Stones, Patients Bring Pebbles to Appointments

Elena Priyma, a dentist from Krasnodar, transforms ordinary stones into art by painting images she sees in their natural shapes, with a recent exhibition showcasing her decade-long hobby.
Feb 21, 2026
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Elena Priyma paints on stones and canvases, blending art with her dental profession.
Source:
Darya Parashchenko / 93.RU

Elena Priyma from Krasnodar is a dentist by profession, but for more than 10 years she has combined work with unusual creativity. She paints pictures on stones that she finds during travels across the country and the world.

Her stone painting of Gulliver shows how natural shapes inspire character depictions.
Source:
Darya Parashchenko / 93.RU

Recently, Elena opened an exhibition of her works at the Kovalenko Art Museum in Krasnodar. 93.RU attended the opening and talked with the artist about how ordinary stones become art in her hands.

Travels across Russia and the world provide the stones that fuel her creativity.
Source:
Darya Parashchenko / 93.RU

«No One Can Say I Drew It Wrong»

She has held around ten solo exhibitions featuring her unique stone artworks.
Source:
Darya Parashchenko / 93.RU

Elena Priyma has no artistic education. As the Krasnodar resident recalls, the desire to paint came to her spontaneously after a trip to Australia, where the dentist opened a «creative portal». At first, Elena painted on canvases, but she always felt something was missing.

Each painted stone develops a distinct character through her artistic interpretation.
Source:
Darya Parashchenko / 93.RU

«I wanted something three-dimensional, alive. I went on vacation to the mountains, and the thought came to try painting on stones. A living, real material, it reveals itself, opens up to you,» says the artist.

A caterpillar depicted on a stone ranks among her favorite creations.
Source:
Darya Parashchenko / 93.RU

When the Krasnodar woman took up stone art, she noticed that some craftsmen in the field saw and polish stones, giving them a specific shape, but Elena fundamentally decided not to do this to preserve the natural beauty of the cobblestones.

A stone painting portrays Vladimir Putin based on the rock«s natural contours.
Source:
Darya Parashchenko / 93.RU

«I don»t process the stones, they are as they are—asymmetrical, crooked. Therefore, no one can say that I drew an eye or a nose wrong because the stone is initially irregularly shaped, and the drawing on it can be that way. I only use acrylic paints and the golden hands of blacksmith Konstantin Kuzmin, who with a hammer and nails on a fire creates missing elements for me.«

She used a Black Sea coast stone to create a Charlie Chaplin likeness.
Source:
Darya Parashchenko / 93.RU

Instead of Magnets, She Brings Stones from Travels

This bear sculpture came from a heavy stone she carried for kilometers.
Source:
Darya Parashchenko / 93.RU

Elena painted her first unusual picture for her friend; in a river, she saw a stone that reminded the artist of her friend«s husband. Now Priyma has more than 150 stone works. Grateful patients or friends know for sure that instead of trinkets, it»s better to give the artist stones.

A giraffe painting on a stalactite-adorned stone originated from a cave in Adygea.
Source:
Darya Parashchenko / 93.RU

«There was a time when patients came to appointments with boxes of pebbles, brought stones in their pockets,» Elena recalls with a smile.

In the collection of the Krasnodar master, there are «canvases» from Peru, Chile, Macedonia, the Solovetsky Islands, the Urals... There was even a stone from Elbrus, which a climber brought to Elena in a backpack after the ascent.

«The very large stones I have are from trips around the Krasnodar region, but from other countries, I sometimes bring them with me. When I»m going on a trip, I take some old, uninteresting shoes, things. And along the way, I simply throw them away, and instead, I pack stones. At the end of the trip, when the taxi driver pulls my suitcase out of the trunk, he says, «What do you have there, bricks or stones?»«

Putin-Stone and Genghis Khan from Lake Baikal

The Krasnodar woman has been painting on stones for 12 years now. As Elena says, everyone has gotten used to her unusual hobby over time. Sometimes she immediately sees an image in the stones, and other times she spends a long time choosing cobblestones where she can realize her idea. According to Elena, it«s more interesting to paint on stones that have already been »shaped by nature,« creating original roughness.

«I have a patient—an honored artist with titles, regalia. At first, he was skeptical about me painting on stones. But then he started attending my exhibitions, saying it»s a new direction, many people like it.«

In Elena«s works, there are fairy-tale and religious motifs and the animal world, but famous personalities are also encountered, such as Vladimir Putin, Charlie Chaplin, or Genghis Khan; for the portrait of the latter, a stone was found in Lake Baikal.

«I don»t remember exactly why I decided to depict the president, I just saw his facial features in the stone. The same happened with Vysotsky. I didn«t intend to draw him because he has a very complex face, and even artists have difficulty capturing it, but it so happened that I saw his features in the stone and just played along.»

For such creativity, physical preparation is also important, as well as the help of friends and relatives. Elena recalls how once she dragged a stone about five kilometers (3.1 miles) on herself. In the end, it turned into a bear.

One of the artist«s most beloved creations is a giraffe on a stone with stalactites. It was brought to Elena as a gift from the Azish Cave in Adygea, which is among the top five largest caves in Europe.

So far, Elena has exhibited her works only in the south, but she would like to hold exhibitions in other cities of Russia; one of the main questions is how to deliver everything. Also, the artist dreams of her own studio where there would be a permanent exhibition of all her works, and for now, part of the creations can be viewed at the Krasnodar Regional Kovalenko Museum at Krasnaya, 15 (2nd floor).

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