"Brazil
Artist Joao Werner Weaves Stories, Emotions"
Deanna Lee Meiresonne
Published
at
NewsBlaze.com
To experience the
Brazilian artist
Joao Werner is to embark on a fantastical experience that has not been
documented since such works the Iliad. A Renaissance artist of sorts,
Werner waxes all things ethereal through mediums of expression that
include stone sculptures, wood, digital art, as well as oil
workmanships.
Be it oil, ash, digital
art or
sculpture, there is not doubt of Werner's poetic nature. Each example
has origin in epic stories from Christian to Hindu cultures, revealing
in some frozen piece of time that speaks of some great human emotion.
In whichever workmanship, the confusing limb angles offer insight into
the characters' anguish. Werner uses pain and suffering to create a
real and relatable feeling that does not disgust, but intrigues.
Of particular note is
Werner's unique
understanding of human nature. Neither praising nor remonstrating a
human's various conditions, has he presented images that are at once
very real and very mythical. A true artist, his seemingly unlimited
sense of palate fleshes out the stories, such as those carved into
cedar panels (as in the intricateness of "Allegory to the life of the
Place without a Name"), or the eight cemented panels worked into the
front of a household (Shikasta).
Most recently, Werner's
work has been
largely centered on experimentations with digital art in both Flash and
Photoshop. In Flash, Werner produces a color and texture as rich as the
characters portrayed, often laborers as presented in "Sugar Cane" or
"Scattering the Coffee Beans". Photoshop resembles the more familiar
oil painting, such as in "Boy" (image shown), the reality of the
inspiration is not lost through the expression.
Werner graduated from
Pontificia
Universidade Catolica in Sao Paulo with a Masters degree in
Communication and Semiotics. Most recently, his work was exhibited at
Jose A. Teodoro Place, Londrina Museum of Arts until May 2005. Until
2001, Werner taught for ten years at the University of the Valley of
the Paraiba. Since it's reopening in 2001, he can be found "creating,
painting, and sculpting" in his studio in Londrina.
Dados
da publicação
Deanna Lee Meiresonne is a talented journalist and fashion editor,
additionally well-versed in screenwriting and creative fiction. Contact
her at NewsBlaze.com
or view her work at BrooWaha
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