She is the author of publications on Ukrainian art of the late 19th and early 20th centuries, in particular on prominent artists of the early period of modern Ukrainian art – Modest Sosenko, Olena Kulchytska, Ivan Severyn, Ivan Trush, Petro Kholodnyi, Mykhailo Boichuk, Antin Manastyrskyi, and Mykhailo Kozyk. She devoted her main works to the work of Oleksa Novakivskyi, as well as his art school and students.[1][2]
Monographs:[2]
- Mystetska shkola Oleksy Novakivskoho u Lvovi: Bibliohrafichnyi slovnyk uchniv (Lviv, 1998),
- Kniazhyi darunok velykoho metsenata. Mytropolyt Andrei Sheptytskyi u zhytti i tvorchosti Oleksy Novakivskoho (Lviv, 2001),
- Avtoportrety Oleksy Novakivskoho (Lviv, 2004),
- Probudzhennia u malarstvi ta rysunkakh O. Novakivskoho (Lviv, 2005),
- Roman Selskyi. Zhyvopys. Hrafika. Albom (Lviv, 2006),
- Istorychni postati kniazhoi doby u tvorakh O. Novakivskoho (Lviv, 2007),
- Rannia hrafika Sviatoslava Hordynskoho. 1920–1930 roky (Lviv, 2007),
- Naukovyi kataloh maliarskykh tvoriv Oleksy Novakivskoho (Lviv, 2008),
- Yaroslav Lukavetskyi (Lviv, 2008),
- Olha Pleshkan (Lviv, 2010),
- Khydozhno-memorialnyi muzei Oleksy Novakivskoho. Putivnyk (Lviv, 2012),
- Ivanna Nyzhnyk-Vynnykiv. Rannia tvorchist u Lvovi. 1920—1930 rr. (Lviv, 2013),
- Ivanna Nyzhnyk-Vynnykiv. Tvorchist na emihratsii. Nimechyna, Frantsiia. 1945—1993 rr. (Lviv, 2015),
- Mytropolyt Andrei Sheptytskyi u tvorchykh doliakh ukrainskykh khudozhnykiv (Lviv; Vol. I, 2015; Vol. II, 2016; Vol. III, 2017),
- Obraz zhinky u tvorakh Oleksy Novakivskoho (Kharkiv, 2018),
- Mystetska shkola Oleksy Novakivskoho 1923–1935. Zhyttia u perspektyvi chasu (Drohobych, 2025).
Albums:[3]
- Liubomyr Medvid. Prytchi (Lviv, 1995),
- Roman Selskyi. Hrafika (Lviv, 2006),
- Bohdan Brateiko. Zhyvopys, hrafika (Lviv, 2006),
- Roman Selskyi. Instytut kolektsionerstva ukrainskykh pamiatok pry NTS (Lviv, 2006),
- Yaroslav Krushelnytskyi (Lviv, 2008),
- Sakralne mystetstvo Hryhoriia Petryshaka (Lviv, 2008),
- Oleksa Novakivskyi (Lviv, 2009),
- Oleksa Novakivskyi (1872–1935) (Lviv, 2012),
- Ivan Klymko. Keramichna plastyka (Lviv, 2013).