ARTIST PROFILE

marisa dipaola

  • United States (b. 1977 in New jersey)
  • Currently in Villach-Landskron, Austria.
  • Born barefoot & wandering to the southern Austrian Alps, marisa paints tired landscapes with new botanical life, & recreates natural worlds handmade from found materials; exploring our wonderland through the alchemy of art-making.
moth orchids

moth orchids

  • 2014
  • Oil on masonite board
  • 58 x 42 cm

  • floral still-life oil painting of moth orchids (Phalaenopsis) growing on old landscape painting, framed upside down

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  •  - thumbnail  - thumbnail Clivia - thumbnail Gartenzwerg (garden gnome) - thumbnail Lupinen & freunden   - thumbnail blooming balcony - thumbnail Tulpen & Schneeglöckchen (tulips & snowbells) - thumbnail hyacinths - thumbnail amaryllis - thumbnail Hyazinthen - thumbnail moth orchids - thumbnail geraniums - thumbnail Granatapfel & Stiefmütterchen (pomegranate & pansies) - thumbnail

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    reblooming landscapes | 2014 - 2016

Since moving to the southern Alps three summers ago, I began wandering around our new woodland home, overwhelmed with the vibrancy and variety of flowers growing here. Some were common varieties I recognized from home; others were entirely new creatures I wanted to learn more about. As I was reminded of medieval Europeans depicting these plants in their imagery, I longed to paint them myself, learning more about each, becoming friends even. Soon afterwards, I began the series of botanical portraits depicting blossoms emerging from old, tired landscape paintings. These blossoms beckoned to be planted in oil-painted permanence, as their portraits capture their beauty long after their petals wither away. These wildflowers were painted over a series of days, so each days' painting traces these intricate flowers through all their stages of blossoming, while watching their interactions with pollinators and capturing neighboring creatures. Entranced painting this series of succulent blooming landscapes, I am remembering the most luscious moments of seasonal beauty here. While painting outside, capturing these portraits in their natural surroundings, the finished paintings become visual reminders of the invisible qualities of being there: the weather and the scents, with babbling brooks and birdsong forming the soundtrack.