U.S. Marine brings street art to LIC 
 BY TAMMY SCILEPPI 
 What  do  Michelangelo,  
 Jacques  Louis  David,  El  
 Greco,  and  ancient  Chinese  
 art  have  to  do  with  urban  
 skateboards  and  musical  instruments? 
   
 Well,  all  have  served  as  
 muses  for  New  York  City  
 creative  Rafael  Colon’s  remarkable  
 skateboard art, and  
 continue  to  inspire  his  entire  
 collection of unexpected,  
 hand-etched  masterpieces,  
 which  also  include  embellished  
 violins,  guitars  and  
 jean jackets. 
 The  artist  describes  his  
 work  as  both  visual  and  tactile 
 .“I’m  inspired  by  everything  
 this world  has  to  show  
 creatively.  My  style  is  all  
 styles,”  said  Colon,  a  former  
 U.S. Marine who was born in  
 Puerto Rico and raised in the  
 Bronx.  “I  studied  the  Japanese  
 woodblock print masters  
 and  the  Renaissance  master  
 artists,  like  Michelangelo,  
 Da  Vinci,  Caravaggio,  etc.,  
 and that’s how my style grew.  
 I  also  read  books  on  art  history, 
   as well  as watched  documentaries  
 and  visited  the  
 Metropolitan Museum of Art,  
 weekly.” 
 Mostly  using  mixed  media  
 —  including  oil,  acrylic,  
 markers and inks — to bring  
 those  artforms  to  life,  Colon  
 said he creates “masterpieces  
 of  art  history”  by  “burning  
 the  images  onto  the  wood  to  
 create a sort of visual Braille  
 –  as  people  can  touch  the  
 art.” 
 So,  it’s  no  wonder  he  has  
 taken  street  artistry  to  a  
 whole new level! And art lovers  
 from Queens  and  beyond  
 have been  flocking  to his  exhibits  
 to see what the hubbub  
 is all about. 
 There  was  a  full  house  at  
 last week’s special event hosted  
 by  MATTED  LIC,  located  
 on  Vernon  Boulevard,  where  
 Colon’s solo show – a culmination  
 of all the artwork he had  
 created  this  past  year  –  was  
 held in tandem with the 10th  
 anniversary  of  the  store  and  
 gallery.  
 Last  year,  MATTED  LIC  
 had  a  group  show  with  a  robot  
 theme and Colon had two  
 skateboards on display (some  
 pieces sold). 
 “After I decided to do a big  
 solo show in the East Village  
 and  had NY1  News  do  an  interview, 
   MATTED  contacted  
 me  if  I  was  willing  to  do  another  
 show,  and  I  said  ‘yes,’”  
 he recalled. 
 Sitting at his artist’s table  
 in  his  apartment  studio  in  
 Spanish  Harlem,  Colon  begins  
 his  painstaking  work  
 by  sanding  down  the  skateboards  
 and  violins.  Then,  he  
 decides what  he  should  draw  
 on his “canvases” and pencils  
 in the images freehand. Next,  
 using  a  wood  burning  tool  
 he  burns  the  pencil  images  
 into the wood and paints over  
 them with oil, acrylic and/or  
 ink and marker.  
 The  result?  An  exquisite  
 dragon  violin  based  on  an  
 ancient 17th century Chinese  
 vase;  eye-catching  skateboard  
 art  à  la  Jacques  Louis  
 David,  the  French  Neoclassical  
 painter  who  blended  
 Greco-Roman  style  with  Enlightenment  
 philosophy;  a  
 Michelangelo-like  triptych  
 of  that  breathtaking  Sistine  
 Chapel  fresco,  “The  Last  
 Judgement,” and more. 
 Additional works include a  
 violin  inspired  by  Czech Art  
 Nouveau  painter  Alphonse  
 Mucha; another skateboard  
 masterpiece  that  pays  homage  
 to  ‘painter  of  the  spirit,’  
 El  Greco;  an  original  creation  
 channeling  Swiss-born  
 painter  H.R.  Giger,  who  was  
 known  for  conjuring  up  that  
 iconic monstrosity  –  the  oozing  
 xenomorph;  remember  
 the alien species at the center  
 of the “Alien” film franchise?  
 Because Colon was also inspired  
 by stories of the ancient  
 past, as told to him by his Chinese  
 grandfather,  as  well  as  
 his travels with the Marines,  
 some  of  his  masterworks  include  
 a  series  of  skateboard  
 decks  that  depict  intricate  
 Courtesy of Rafael Colon 
 Asian  imagery  featuring  the  
 artist’s other muses: Samurai  
 warriors,  Japanese  Geishas,  
 and  Peking  Opera  performers. 
 Having  exhibited  in  Manhattan, 
  mostly, Colon has also  
 shown  in  Brooklyn  and  has  
 had  solo  shows  in  San  Francisco  
 and a group show in Los  
 Angeles;  he’s  looking  into  a  
 future show in Miami. 
 Sometimes,  amazing  
 things  happen  in  surprising  
 and unexpected ways. 
 “I’m  a  self-taught  artist  
 with no formal art training,”  
 Colon  noted.  “I  started  the  
 skateboard  art  seven  years  
 ago  because  of  an  idea  my  
 daughter had at the time.” 
 Tues. & Wed. $1895 
 1 1/4 lb. Lobster, Clams, and Mussels 
 Served with Corn on the Cob 
 and Baked Potato  
 with Purchase of 2 Cocktails, 
 2 Wines or 2 Beers 
 36     TIMESLEDGER, OCT. 25-31, 2019 QNS.COM 
 
				
/QNS.COM