Floral Quilted Portraits by Maria A. Guzmán Capron Cultivate Care and Love
Detail of “Otra Vez.” All images courtesy of Lyles & King, shared with permission
Floral Quilted Portraits by Maria A. Guzmán Capron Cultivate Care and Love
May 14, 2025
Art
Grace Ebert
For thousands of years, flowers have been a rich source of symbolism. Dating back to the Ottomans, floriology, or the language of flowers, blossomed in the Victorian era when a bouquet functioned as a nonverbal code. The delicate sweetpea, for example, might have been given as a thank you to a particularly generous host, while buttercups would tell the recipient that the sender thought them childish and immature.
Maria A. Guzmán Capronreferences the timeless expressions of flowers for Solo Pienso en Volver a Verte, which opens this week at Lyles & King. Translating to “I only think about seeing you again,” the solo exhibition comprises the artist’s signature textile portraits of opulently patterned fabrics in a layered patchwork. Soft and plump with batting, the quilted characters are each unique, although Capron sometimes uses the same secondhand material on several pieces.
“Déjame Llevarte”
Encircled in hand-dyed fabrics, the figures in this body of work are often doubled or conjoined, as in the embracing women of “Otra Vez” or the two-faced subject of “Echa de Pedacitos.” Love, warmth, and protection feature prominently, as hands grasp for one another or emerge as a three-dimensional gesture. Capron envisions these layered, hybrid forms as a way to visualize the various identities, experiences, and memories within all of us.
The artist also stitches and screenprints a wide array of flowers on faces, garments, and throughout the lush surroundings. Sometimes abstract and often indeterminate, the blooms share stories and messages of desire that might be unspeakable or better communicated through a symbol of affection. Tending to love in all of its forms is the thread that runs through each work, as Capron welcomes us into a world in which compassion and care are the most beautiful gifts.
Solo Pienso en Volver a Verte runs through June 21 in New York. Find more from Capron on Instagram.
“Otra Vez”
“Echa de Pedacitos”
“Para Que Me Mires”
“Te Dejé Quererme”
Detail of “Y Comencé”
“También Allí”
“Algo Escondido”
Detail of “Otra Vez”
“Y Comencé”
Detail of “Te Dejé Quererme”
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#floral #quilted #portraits #maria #guzmán
Floral Quilted Portraits by Maria A. Guzmán Capron Cultivate Care and Love
Detail of “Otra Vez.” All images courtesy of Lyles & King, shared with permission
Floral Quilted Portraits by Maria A. Guzmán Capron Cultivate Care and Love
May 14, 2025
Art
Grace Ebert
For thousands of years, flowers have been a rich source of symbolism. Dating back to the Ottomans, floriology, or the language of flowers, blossomed in the Victorian era when a bouquet functioned as a nonverbal code. The delicate sweetpea, for example, might have been given as a thank you to a particularly generous host, while buttercups would tell the recipient that the sender thought them childish and immature.
Maria A. Guzmán Capronreferences the timeless expressions of flowers for Solo Pienso en Volver a Verte, which opens this week at Lyles & King. Translating to “I only think about seeing you again,” the solo exhibition comprises the artist’s signature textile portraits of opulently patterned fabrics in a layered patchwork. Soft and plump with batting, the quilted characters are each unique, although Capron sometimes uses the same secondhand material on several pieces.
“Déjame Llevarte”
Encircled in hand-dyed fabrics, the figures in this body of work are often doubled or conjoined, as in the embracing women of “Otra Vez” or the two-faced subject of “Echa de Pedacitos.” Love, warmth, and protection feature prominently, as hands grasp for one another or emerge as a three-dimensional gesture. Capron envisions these layered, hybrid forms as a way to visualize the various identities, experiences, and memories within all of us.
The artist also stitches and screenprints a wide array of flowers on faces, garments, and throughout the lush surroundings. Sometimes abstract and often indeterminate, the blooms share stories and messages of desire that might be unspeakable or better communicated through a symbol of affection. Tending to love in all of its forms is the thread that runs through each work, as Capron welcomes us into a world in which compassion and care are the most beautiful gifts.
Solo Pienso en Volver a Verte runs through June 21 in New York. Find more from Capron on Instagram.
“Otra Vez”
“Echa de Pedacitos”
“Para Que Me Mires”
“Te Dejé Quererme”
Detail of “Y Comencé”
“También Allí”
“Algo Escondido”
Detail of “Otra Vez”
“Y Comencé”
Detail of “Te Dejé Quererme”
Next article
#floral #quilted #portraits #maria #guzmán