Tatler takes a sneak peak inside the artist's studio, and speaks to him about his creative process and how he engages with memories.
One of Angel Otero’s first drawings was of Hello Kitty. At the age of six, the Puerto Rican artist saw his neighbour, a young girl, drawing a perfect copy of the cartoon character. He was fascinated by what he saw and wanted to try it for himself. “It wasn’t because I was into Hello Kitty or anything,” he’s quick to clarify. “I was just amazed that she was able to draw perfectly from memory, and I wanted to learn how to do it.”
Otero has since moved on to more challenging characters and motifs, and developed his well-recognised abstract collage aesthetic. In his high-ceilinged industrial Brooklyn studio, paint-speckled tools, collaged memorabilia and vibrant, chaotic canvases fill an otherwise clean and organised space. Most prominently, three canvases featuring three singular waves in various stages of completion sprawl across stark white walls.
Waves were one of the earliest standard motifs the artist was formally taught how to draw—he recalls being told to write to write the letter “C” and build from that, adapting the curved lines to make swelling bodies of water. “It’s these things I hold onto when I’m thinking about art—my early beginnings as an artist and my connection to my past.”