Carlmel Bernard Belda works slowly, and he knows it. A single piece can take weeks — not because he is uncertain, but because the technique demands it. He draws first in sepia graphite, mapping the scene, laying down every tonal decision before anything is permanent. Then he buries that drawing under acrylic. The image vanishes. He lets it dry. Then he comes back with something small — a barbecue stick, a dart pin, the fine edge of a blade — and starts taking the paint away, line by careful line, until the drawing underneath begins to resurface. He calls this recovery, not painting.
He studied Fine Arts, majored in Advertising. But he found that the images he needed to make had nothing to do with what he was trained to sell. What he couldn't stop seeing were the Filipino scenes most people move through without pausing: the geometry of a jeepney crowd, the posture of someone who has been kneeling too long, children disappearing into an alley for a game that will end when the streetlights come on. The moments nobody commissions.
He belongs to Kuta Artists Group and Alpas Art Group. He teaches through CB Art Workshop — home visits, students who want to learn how to look at things carefully. The teaching is the same instinct as the making. Both are about attention. Both are about not looking away.