Traveling as an Artist: Finding Color, Chaos, and Clarity in South America

Travel changes an artist — not just their surroundings, but their instincts. For Matthew Branagan, a recent journey through South America became less a trip and more a creative turning…

Bogotá: Where Walls Speak

High in the Andes, Bogotá moves at a different rhythm. In La Candelaria, Matthew wandered narrow colonial streets layered with graffiti and murals. The city’s street art — bold, political, unapologetic — reshaped his thinking about public expression.

He sketched quickly, responding to colour blocks, layered posters, and watchful painted faces. Without his usual studio setup, he worked with just a small watercolour kit and pencil. The limitation made his lines looser, more instinctive.

The Broader South American Influence

Beyond Colombia, South America expanded his sense of scale and saturation. The Andes’ vast horizons, rainforest greens, and market textiles sharpened his eye for contrast and texture. Instead of painting literal scenes, Matthew began translating atmosphere — humidity, altitude, movement — into layered compositions.

A Shift in Voice

By the time he returned home, his work carried visible traces of Bogotá: stronger color contrasts, rawer edges, and themes of urban identity. The trip reminded Matthew Branagan that art doesn’t need to be confined to a studio. It can live on walls, in plazas, in conversation.

Travel didn’t change who he was as an artist.
It clarified it.

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