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Every portrait captures loyalty and presence
Hand-drawn from your photos • Pastel (rich texture) • Oil (classic sheen) • Worldwide shipping
Every gaze holds a world within
Commissioned portraits in graphite, charcoal, or oil. From photographs, true likeness is achieved with nuance and depth — ideal for tributes or keepsakes.
Archival papers and paints • Multiple sizes • Framing-ready
Bespoke animal portraits in pastel or oil, created to capture not only appearance but essence. Each piece reflects loyalty, emotion, and the bond you share, designed to become part of your everyday space.
Hand-drawn from your photos. Pastel for rich texture; oil for classic sheen. Worldwide shipping.
Hyperrealism is not instant. Each portrait demands dozens of hours, often stretching toward a hundred, depending on the subject’s complexity. Every detail, the texture of fur, the reflection in an eye, the softness of skin, is built layer by layer, stroke by stroke.
This is not a machine-printed image, but the result of patience, precision, and presence. Choosing such a portrait means embracing the slow rhythm of true craftsmanship, where the wait is part of the value.
In the end, each portrait is more than an image — it is a fragment of memory made visible, a presence you can hold onto.
Human portraits in graphite or black stone are not mere likenesses. They hold the unspoken, a silence, a strength, a story etched in gaze and line. Each drawing becomes a mirror where fragility and power meet.
From iconic figures to intimate commissions, every portrait is a meditation on memory and truth, designed to outlast time.
Shadows in graphite or black stone are not emptiness, but language. They carve depth, intensity, and resonance, revealing the unseen layers of character.
Choosing a portrait in these mediums is choosing contrast and timeless drama — a way of capturing what photography alone cannot hold.
A new chapter in Lysa Karell’s pictorial practice is currently taking shape within the Bottega del Vento, a creative space where art explores the shifting boundaries of the visible.
This new body of oil paintings emerges from an exploratory approach that weaves together anatomy, memory, transformation, and the symbolic constructions of the body. Here, pictorial matter does more than represent, it unfolds as a language of structure, traces of memory, and living testimonies to a dialogue between the heritage of the past and what lies ahead.
Each canvas, conceived as a world in itself, is built up through successive layers, chromatic densities, and measured gestures. This slow, deliberate process shapes a sensitive encounter between the natural and the artificial, the intimate and the conceptual, bringing them into silent conversation.
This first chapter marks the beginning of a longer creative cycle. Together, these works propose a plastic reflection on what remains when form dissolves and on the multiple states of existence beyond its material reality. The first pieces will be revealed soon.
Each creation is born in the Bottega Del Vento, the artist’s living atelier, before being revealed to the public in Atropa Parcae · Del Vento — Grand Gallery, a space dedicated to collections and art objects. As the official showcase, it is where art meets the public and can be acquired.
A classic symbol, this logo embodies the artistic universe of Lysa Karell.
Inspired by Sandro Botticelli and his Venus, it evokes the birth of art, the power of the wind, and the depth of the ocean—forces both free and untamable that flow through her work.
The cushions, notebooks, phone cases, and mugs shown here are only an entry point: a much wider collection awaits discovery.
Hundreds of black and white illustrations converge within Atropa Parcae, spanning vintage icons, retro cinema, mystical bestiaries, esoteric symbols, and visions drawn from cultures across the world.
Each piece is hand–drawn with nuance and depth, blending historical inspiration with contemporary elegance. A gallery where every line opens a new world.
Enter the gallery and let each illustration reveal its story.
A graphic vision of Wednesday, shaped by the sardonic legacy of Charles Addams, the gothic reinvention of Tim Burton, and the intensity embodied by Jenna Ortega.
Through the precision of line and the depth of shadow, each stroke becomes presence and mystery.
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