Art Without Permission.
Camila O’Gorman
Camila O’Gorman

Camila O’Gorman paints people the way memories remember them.
Not perfectly. Not posed. But alive, slightly blurred at the edges — like something you’ve felt before but can’t quite place.
Working primarily in oils, and occasionally in watercolor and pencil, her work moves between portrait and everyday observation. A glance, a moment, a presence — captured with a softness that feels both intimate and unmistakably human.
Trained at the prestigious National School of Fine Arts “Prilidiano Pueyrredón” in Buenos Aires, Camila later refined her practice through painting and watercolor workshops with the renowned Guillermo Roux. Since the mid-90s, her work has been exhibited across Santiago, Miami, and Buenos Aires, including fairs such as Eggo and Arteespacio.
Her exhibitions span both group and solo shows, with notable presentations at galleries like Javier Baliña and Mundo Nuevo, as well as solo exhibitions at the ICBC Foundation.
Since 2013, Camila has been teaching painting and drawing from her studio — continuing a quiet dialogue between observing and creating, passing that sensitivity on to others.
Her work doesn’t try to impress. It lingers.























