Ever seen a work of art that resembles an acclaimed piece or is very similar to an artist's style? There is a strong chance that the artwork is a pastiche. But what is pastiche? Pastiche art uses the distinctive image or style of another artwork, while still infusing the artist's own style. This allows artists to celebrate the greats of art history, whether by paying homage or making a sociopolitical statement. Pastiche is nothing new and has been used as a method to create art for years. There are many successful pieces that honor famous artists such as Leonardo da Vinci, Andy Warhol, Vincent Van Gogh, Johannes Vermeer, among others. Find out here which artists from P55.ART create pastiche works of art.
Manuel Terán, plastic artist, painter, offers the spectator a set of different tributes to contemporary geniuses, such as Yayoi Kusama, Frida Kahlo, Lucio Fontana, among others. He has exhibited in Milan, Santiago de Chile, Murcia, Madrid, Toledo, Valencia and Cuenca. The most recent project, Retrato Capital, was launched at Fundación Caja Madrid (Espacio para el Arte, Madrid) and art galleries in Madrid, Bilbao, León and Pamplona. Since 2000, Manuel Terán works with digital art in projects of digital naturalness in collaboration with other artists, focusing on the field of aesthetics and the creation of hybrid supports for creation. The latest work in the multidisciplinary creation area of the ÓRBITA project centers its interests on the coherence of the use of new technologies, investigating supports and recent technological programs for its diversification. He currently resides in Spain and works on an IDCOM short film project and as art director for Intact01, Interfaz.
João Lima celebrates art and honors famous artists by infusing your style with features of the painters you love. The Portuguese artist is inspired by the favorite characters of all children. Pluto, Mickey, Minnie, among others, are the protagonists of his paintings that seek inspiration from the great masters of contemporary times. An example of this is the influence of Fernando Botero, the renowned Colombian painter and sculptor known for his volumetric stylization of figures and objects, and for his comprehensive use of everyday life, art historical references such as the Mona Lisa and abuses of power. All these features of Botero's exaggeratedly round figures are unified with Disney characters. Although the use of these figures is common, it is still exciting to see the Portuguese artist's productions. João Lima, due to the way it celebrates childhood and all the characters loved by “kids and adults”.
With a new attention given to the common object and its transformation, François Farcy (1994) creates works inserted in a mass culture. The French artist explores different elements, from mannequins with the human figure to animal sculptures. With intense, fluorescent and vibrant colors, he transforms his pieces, giving them a new aesthetic aspect. The influence of artists such as Basquiat and the pop art movement. The massification of popular capitalist culture and the aesthetics of the masses are revealed through pieces with brand symbols or popular elements. Exploring various supports, François Farcy offers a close look at current culture in a spontaneous and emotional way.
Talita Barbosa is a Luso-Brazilian painter who graduated in Fine Arts from the Pontifical Catholic University of Campinas, in São Paulo. The artist has been creating paintings with acrylic paint on 3D canvas, with strong and vibrant colors, always delineated by a precise contour that brings a striking contrast between the elements of the work. With a modern touch, Talita Barbosa draws inspiration from iconic people, classic artwork, pop art and comics, to produce vibrant pieces that can help you add modern, modern vibes to your home. “I believe that we all need colors in our lives to face everyday life with enthusiasm” - Talita Barbosa. the works of Talita Barbosa, with the iconic figures, Elvis, Bob Marley, Amy Winehouse, have already been presented in individual and group exhibitions in Portugal and Brazil.
Alota Ribeiro is a visual artist from Guimarães, Portugal who masters several artistic techniques — engraving, cutting in linoleum, collages, painting and manufactures part of the paper she uses in supports for painting. Her creative process is mainly composed of portraits, stories of individuals that reveal human emotions that are linked to her daily life and the artistic universe, by producing images that personify her and clarify the social state in which she is inserted. It thus portrays experiences, which are often negative, and appeals to the spectator for observation and the power of imagination. “Realism is for me my only manifesto. Painting requires a lot of observation, waiting time, experimentation and correction. Painting is the magic moment of colors, brightness, shadow, opacity, transparency... it is the beginning of an always surprising result.” — Alota Ribeiro