
Mexican-born abstract artist Carmen Carpena grew up wanting to be an artist, but living in a country with serious economic opportunities, she was urged to pursue more “serious” work. However, after losing a close family member, she found herself turning to art as a way to express and exorcize her pain. Though it started as a form of self-care, her work caught the eye of a few fellow artists who encouraged her to keep going. Like many artists, Carpena began her art career with realistic paintings, but she soon found that abstract forms gave her more freedom to express herself.
Her work is a compelling mixture of pets and people and architecture, and I find it dynamic and interesting. Carpena’s abstract shapes begin with an interesting process by which she dips glass balls in paint and knocks them around her canvas. She then lets the marks the balls make inform the painting’s subject. I don’t know how much control she exercises over the trajectory of the balls, but the chaos the process creates means her work is always reinventing itself.
You can follow Carmen Carpena on her website and on YouTube, Instagram, and Facebook.











December 10, 2025 at 8:57 am
These are pretty cool. And using the balls to spread the paint–not something I would ever have thought of.
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December 10, 2025 at 12:21 pm
I am constantly wowed by the weirdly-creative brains of the artists I encounter!
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December 10, 2025 at 2:50 pm
I was just doing process art with my preschoolers today that involved rolling magnetic balls through blobs of paint. I, therefore, love that this artist is not only using a similar approach to introduce an element of unpredictable chaos to her artwork but also to engage in that sense of play through creativity.
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December 11, 2025 at 10:44 am
What a fun idea to do with kids!
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