Menu
The New Contemporary Art Magazine

Folded Watercolors by Marcelo Daldoce Add Dimension to Portraiture

Born in Brazil, living in New York City, Marcelo Daldoce gives substance and heft to watercolor portraits.

Born in Brazil, living in New York City, Marcelo Daldoce gives substance and heft to watercolor portraits.

When you watch videos of him at work, he seems to use his brush as a conductor uses her baton. The initial pencil sketch serves as a printed musical score’s starting point. Forming ponds and rivulets, the hued water generously applied serves as yet uncoordinated harmonies. And the movement of the brush serves to create order out of chaos. Watching him marshal the water around the paper, knowing when to relinquish control, when to acknowledge happy accidents, is magical. With him, it’s all in the timing. The portraits’ atmospheres are airy, barely there. The paper’s texture becomes the feel of skin, of clothing. The images seem ephemeral, as if they’re about to fly away.

For him, though, that’s not enough. As he writes, he wants to bring life to a flat surface: paint becomes flesh, paper becomes sculpture. He folds these portraits in ingenious ways. The result is a mix between sculpture and painting. Really though, it’s an origami version of Cubism.

Sometimes the emphasis is on individual subjects. The folded pleats of paper, for instance, continue the painted design of the sitter’s dress. Folding introduces dynamic and dynamic introduces narrative. The subjects become accordion women, peekaboo women. Each one looks like a runway model harlequin that’s stepped out from the second dimension into the third. Note too that harlequins were subjects of Cubist paintings. Sometimes, with complex folds, the pieces take on the appearance of installations.

It’s the works’ hybrid quality that creates these vignettes of the subject as she responds to her environment. Daldoce uses trompe l’oeil to create a sense of wonder, both in the skill that made it possible as well as in the realization that such simple things can occasion such measured responses.


Detail


Detail


Detail

Meta
Share
Facebook
Reddit
Pinterest
Email
Related Articles
he paintings of Andrew Hem linger just left of reality. With his instantly recognizable style, Hem blends figurative painting and atmospheric landscapes, echoes of graffiti art and a deep understanding of color harmony. Rendering scenes both urban and rural, modern yet outside of time, he creates works that are a mix of realism and surrealism, personal truths and collective dreams. Read all about the artist by clicking above.
Ellen Jewett’s handsculpted and handpainted “natural history surrealist sculptures” add surreal and sometimes-whimsical touches to wild creatures. Her recent works include the fantastical “the burden of motion and ambition” bear, which seems ripped from its own narrative, and the winged “"of illumination and empathy.” Jewett was last featured on cctvta.com here.
Specializing in the Japanese art form of paper architecture, Amsterdam-based artist Ingrid Siliakus creates incredibly detailed architectural masterpieces from single pieces of paper. In order to achieve a final result with the complexity and beauty that she intends, Siliakus may produce anywhere from 20 to over 30 prototypes: “Paper architecture does not bare haste, it is its enemy,” she says. “One moment of loss of concentration can lead to failure of a piece.”

Luca Ledda’s surreal works deal with both our conception of the world and our consumption of its resources. The Turin artist offers these scenes in murals and gallery work across the globe. Recent projects include pieces in Belgium, Mexico, Bosnia, and beyond.

Subscribe to the Hi-Fructose Mailing List