Flesh and Canvas

From Brasília to Bad Habits, Artist Diego Dellarte’s work blurs the line between tattoo and masterpiece.

By Jasmin Espinal 
In an era when tattoos have become mainstream, true mastery still stands apart. Few artists embody that distinction more clearly than Diego Dellarte.

“Tattoo is art,” he says simply. “So, it has to be art.”

At Bad Habits Tattoo and Laser in Fort Lauderdale, nothing is rushed. Diego studies his reference—light first, then form, then shadow—before the needle ever moves. The machine hums; his focus doesn’t waver. Hyper-realism leaves no room for ego. “If the shadow is wrong, everything is wrong,” he says. “You cannot guess.”

In his hands, skin becomes canvas. His portraits carry depth. Eyes hold reflection. Fabric folds convincingly. Clients don’t ask for quick designs; they come for permanence executed with precision.

“I always loved drawing,” he says. “Since I was a kid, I never stopped.”

Born in Brasília, Brazil, Diego traces that obsession back to his mother, a nurse who once drew him a picture of Batman. “That was it,” he says with a smile. “After that, I just kept drawing.”

Friends began asking him to create images they planned to have tattooed. Eventually he realized he wanted control over the final outcome. “I wanted to do it myself. I didn’t want someone else to change what I imagined.”

His father wasn’t convinced. “He said, ‘Tattoo is for delinquents,’” Diego recalls, laughing. The conversation shifted when a family acquaintance mentioned a successful tattoo artist earning a substantial income. “When he heard that, he started to think differently.”

His mother bought him his first equipment. “She always supported me,” he says. “From the beginning.”

Under the mentorship of fellow artist Alex Garcia, Diego began tattooing. “I studied everything—skin, depth, contrast. You have to know how the skin works,” he says. “Hyper-realism is patience.”

He opened a commercial studio in Brazil, but growth required risk. “If you are comfortable, something is wrong,” he says. “You cannot evolve being comfortable.”

That belief took him to Italy, where he immersed himself in Renaissance art. “I wanted to understand the masters,” he says. There, he studied chiaroscuro—the dramatic contrast of light and shadow made famous during the Renaissance and Baroque periods by painters like Caravaggio and Leonardo da Vinci, who used it to create emotional intensity and three-dimensional form.

“I learned to see light differently,” Diego says. “Not just to copy a photo.”

He brought that discipline back to Brazil, not first to canvas, but to skin.

Today, he builds tattoos in layers, almost like oil glazing. “You don’t rush,” he says. “You build.” Skin tones feel dimensional. Metallic surfaces catch reflection. Texture reads as stone, silk, steel. His realism isn’t replication; it’s interpretation sharpened.

By 2016, he was running another studio. Then the pandemic changed everything. In 2022, an opportunity brought him to Fort Lauderdale and Bad Habits Tattoo and Laser.

Starting over didn’t intimidate him. “My family calls me crazy,” he says with a grin. “I had a beautiful studio in Brazil and I sold everything. I did this before to go to Italy. I did it again to come here.”

Clients now travel specifically for his hyper-realistic portraits—family members, cinematic compositions, deeply personal pieces rendered with restraint and depth. “Every highlight is important,” he says. “Every shadow has a reason.”

And the evolution continues.

“I’m starting my painting career now,” Diego says. “It’s the same discipline. Just a different surface.”

For him, tattooing was never rebellion or trend. It demanded discipline.

“You have to take risks,” he says. “Don’t be scared. If you want to grow, you move.”

Tattooing has traveled far from its early associations. In studios like his, it has become something else entirely—intentional, disciplined, elevated.

And in a medium where permanence is the point, conviction is everything.

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