Cuban American artist Alissa Pradera is well-recognized for her realistic two-dimensional artwork. Her creative practice includes concentrations of two separate themes: trauma and the inevitable suffering that comes with being human and youth and vibrancy, occasionally with a Disney connection.
She employs personal narratives and the physical self as the subject matter in her work that focuses on the human experience. In her work, she hopes to disrupt societal standards that dictate the customary emotional silencing of an individual’s hurts, worries, and problems. Pradera’s personal medical traumas and past fears of the unknown inspire her creative voice. She incorporates universal themes to spark conversation and connection while also paying tribute to those painful times in her works, using art as a means of healing. Her goal is to start a dialogue about the beauty and resiliency that these events provide as being unavoidable in the human experience.
Her other creative focus, which explores the joy of color and is rooted in her love of Disney, aims to encourage happiness, boldness, and the important lesson of always remaining a child at heart. She takes pleasure in creating art of great vibrancy that occasionally incorporates the Walt Disney Company’s well-known characters and storyline while maintaining her unique loose style. This area of creative concentration helps her rekindle her youth and happy recollections.
Sponsored by: John and Judy Scheffel in memory of Harold W. Scheffel