Angelina Maia has lived in Portugal for 30 years, with
14 of those years spent in the beautiful Algarve. The complexity and beauty of
her sculptures is what initially grabbed my attention, I just couldn’t believe
it was made out of card.
Angelina explained that her sculptures take about
three weeks to create but that it depends on each piece, for example, her
cardboard dress at Casa Velha “took about four months to finish.” Angelina’s
enthusiasm for cardboard is infectious and you would never have known that she
is in fact a self-taught artist and that her background is in business. Her
talent really speaks for itself.
Angelina told me that she worked with her husband in a
family business in the north of Portugal and that when they moved to the
Algarve, she did translation work as her children were young at the time.
“After a year or so I got fed up and I needed to do something with my hands.”
It was actually a conversation with her family at Christmas that sparked this
journey in 2015, “they asked me what I would really like to do and to their
surprise I said I would really like to make cardboard furniture, having seen it
10 years prior on TV. It stayed with me and I wanted to do something different
so I took cardboard furniture lessons in France and my first piece was an
armchair.”
Forever Flourishing & Evolving
Angelina’s beautiful creations have greatly evolved,
having started by making cardboard furniture and other items to sell to tourists
at Loulé art craft markets through Loulé Creativo. “Anything I could think of I
would do, from lamps to jewellery to sardine-themed items”. Today, Angelina is
represented by numerous galleries where her delicate and beautiful sculptures
are sold around the world. “A gallerist, saw my lamps made of cardboard and
wanted to exhibit my work but if I could do something more artistic, that
challenged me and I worked for three months until I had my sculptures to show
her and she loved it”.
“It has been a journey since I started but with the
same passion, except now I concentrate on women’s bodies and fashion.” I
love the way Angelina’s sculptures speak volumes, especially on the subject of
femininity, “I am passionate about women’s bodies and I have had many friends
with breast cancer and so I started a series with the theme of breast cancer,
with one breast missing and that did inspire my journey and it reinforces that
women’s bodies are beautiful despite health problems.”
Angelina then proudly showed me her remarkable bustier
sculpture which was inspired by the heart of Viana and contains embedded
Swarovski crystals. And when it comes to fashion-inspired pieces, Angelina told
The Portugal News that “I like to see the grand couture in Paris and
that gives me many ideas which is why I made the dress, I imagined someone
wearing it.” I told Angelina, you never know what the future holds and she
agreed that she would “love to see my bustiers worn.”
Angelina’s sculptures are famously gold and silver but
Angelina has experimented with different colours including one in black with
platters of paint, which I love. “At the beginning I worked with raw materials
and my sculptures were just raw with varnish but then I started experimenting.
The one with splatters of paint actually came from being approached by a pop
art gallery in Switzerland and their gallery inspired me to make some fun
colourful pieces.” Jokingly adding the therapeutic side of splatting paint on
the grass outside.
Angelina is currently preparing to exhibit in Paris
next month in which she is creating a wall of cardboard creations. She also
told The Portugal News that she does do pieces by commission, having
even done sculptures of people’s faces which she can mould.
Art Connects Women in Dubai
When asked for a highlight in her career, Angelina
told The Portugal News that she was honoured to be selected to represent
Portugal in the 5th edition of Art Connects Women in Dubai which is under the
patronage of UNESCO, which brought 115 women artists from all over the world
together. I was very proud to represent Portugal and it was great experience
where I got to speak with other women artists and see their work.
Where to see Angelina’s Sculptures
Angelina’s sculptures are currently exhibited across
the Algarve in Aderita Artistic Place Gallery in Vale do Lobo, Quinta Style in
Almancil, Tavira d’Artes Gallery in Tavira and Lady in Red Gallery in Lagoa.
Her work is also exhibited in Sintra’s LM Gallery and was previously in a
five-star hotel in Porto, in which she hopes to exhibit in the north again but
also outside of Portugal like in Germany for example “I try to do about two
fairs a year and I enjoy visiting new places but it is my husband who pushes me
and he is a great supporter.” Her sculptures are also exhibited in art
galleries in France and Switzerland and private collections all over Europe but
her sculptures have travelled even further than that, in Canada, USA and even
India.
Angelina also shares her passion for cardboard with
others by hosting cardboard furniture construction workshops so if you are
interested in learning techniques, please do not hesitate to contact her. For
more information, please visit www.cartaoconcept.com or
@maiaangelina on Instagram. For commissions and workshop details please email cartaoconcept@gmail.com.
Following undertaking her university degree in English with American Literature in the UK, Cristina da Costa Brookes moved back to Portugal to pursue a career in Journalism, where she has worked at The Portugal News for 3 years. Cristina’s passion lies with Arts & Culture as well as sharing all important community-related news.