Past Expositions2018-03-08T17:40:13+00:00

ÉVORA “Painted architectures ” 12 october – 29 march 2020. Fundação Eugénio de Almeida.

The exhibition will present works of 17 renowned contemporary Spanish artists: Ángel Mateo Charris, Marcelo Fuentes, Dis Berlin, Damián Flores, Carlos García Alix, Paco de la Torre, Teresa Tomás, Joël Mestre, Roberto Mollá, Jorge Tarazona, Fernando Martín Godoy, Elena Goñi, Juan Cuéllar, Guillermo Peñalver Fernández,[...]

BERLIN. Aitor Ortíz “Expanded Photography 2002 – 2018” 28 september 2019 – 11 january 2020. Galerie Springer.

In the exhibition Expanded Photography 2002–2018, Galerie Springer Berlin is showing three different work cycles by the Basque artist Aitor Ortiz in which traditional photographic boundaries are surpassed in surprising and fascinating ways. Beyond the documentary photography of architecture and industry, and asserting the[...]

BARCELONA. Juan Uslé “Unsettled” 10 october – 9 january 2020. Joan Prats Gallery.

It is a pleasure to present Juan Uslé's fourth solo exhibition at Galeria Joan Prats, titled 'Unsettled', which shows his latest paintings and photographs. "Unsettled" means unstable, but also variable, restless, something that includes opposites, or a paradox. In Uslé's paintings, the stripes of[...]

BERLIN. Eduard Bigas “Time and the Others” 27th september – 25th october 2019. Galerie Kuching.

Eduard Bigas is, with weight and measure, methodical. He has, at the same time the wild spirit of a perpetual student, always eager to learn, to evolve. This means that he will obsess over his craft, the control of the light and the placement[...]

LONDON. “Manolo Valdés” 25 october – 15 november 2019. Opera Gallery.

This October, Opera Gallery London is proud and excited to present the first solo exhibition dedicated to Manolo Valdés in the Mayfair district of the city. Internationally acclaimed both as a painter and as a sculptor, Manolo Valdés, born in 1942 in Valencia, Spain,[...]

PARIS “Jaume Plensa” 10 october – 16 november 2019. Lelong Gallery.

Jaume Plensa has conceived this new exhibition as a silent conversation. In the first part of the gallery, three heads of young girls, some three metres high, stand on the floor. Originally carved from tree trunks then cast in bronze, the elongation of the[...]

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