海角社区

Pedro Paricio Five Things to Know Pedro Paricio Five Things to Know

Pedro Paricio

Five Things to Know
/

Contemporary Spanish artist Pedro Paricio sets out to solve conceptual problems, to incorporate street culture into fine art, to pay homage to great artistic figures of the past and to examine and question the role of the artist in bright and dynamic canvases. Discover 5 Things to Know about Paricio and his distinctive works.

If you are interested in adding to your collection, speak to one of our art consultants now - email us at info@halcyongallery.com

He has a distinctive visual language
Pedro Paricio
I Would Take a Silver Bullet For You, 2019
Polished and coated stainless steel
121.5 x 121.5 x 3.5cm

He has a distinctive visual language

Pedro Paricio’s unique visual language blurs the boundaries between the figurative and the abstract. His vibrant designs are a signature motif, filling familiar silhouettes with prismatic colours and geometric patterns.

There is an inclusiveness to Paricio’s artwork: by eradicating facial features and stripping away the subject’s identity, his paintings are a representation of universal humanity. The artist invites us to view familiar images afresh and participate in the act of creation. The ambiguity of his compositions allows the viewer to project their own experience onto the artwork to derive personal meaning from it. ‘What I want is that you finish completing the work’, Paricio explains, ‘It is like a kind of trio, me, painting and you.’

He appropriates from art history
Pedro Paricio
The Painter, 2020
Acrylic on linen
114 x 81 cm

He appropriates from art history

Paricio participates in a long tradition of appropriation and reinvention in the history of painting. This has been a recurring theme throughout his career and was most thoroughly expanded upon in his solo exhibition Tradition at 海角社区 (2022). Paricio continues this exploration in his most recent exhibition Nine Portraits at Mapfre Foundation (until 4 January 2024).

Incorporating elements of Pop art and street art, he reimagines figures and gestures from the Western canon of art history. His inspiration ranges from the Old Masters including Vermeer, Velázquez and Artemisia Gentileschi to twentieth-century trailblazers like Hockney, Warhol and Picasso. Instantly recognisable silhouettes such as Vermeer’s Girl with a Pearl Earring or Grant Wood’s American Gothic are transformed by Paricio’s distinctive style.

Picasso is a significant influence
Pedro Paricio
Bull from Guernica, 2018
Acrylic on linen
92.5 x 97 cm

Picasso is a significant influence

Paricio draws inspiration from Picasso, another Spanish artist who constantly engaged with tradition, ‘borrowing’ iconic imagery and motifs. In his 2019 exhibition, Paricio· Picasso, at 海角社区, Paricio continued his ongoing dialogue with artists of the past. The exhibition featured works Paricio created in response to Picasso, including a series of etchings inspired by his print series, the Vollard Suite.

This connection with the father of Cubism is enhanced by Paricio’s ties to Picasso’s birthplace, Andalusia. Paricio’s mother is also from this region of southern Spain and he would spend summers there as child. The contemporary artist has expressed a deep affinity for Picasso, evident not only in their approach to appropriation and reinvention of art historical references, but also their shared personal history and culture.

 

For his latest exhibition, Paricio returns to his roots
Pedro Paricio
Puppet , 2011
Acrylic on linen
244 x 152 cm

For his latest exhibition, Paricio returns to his roots

Paricio returns home to the Canary Islands for his latest exhibition, Nine Portraits, which is currently showing at the Mapfre Foundation in Las Palmas de Gran Canaria. In this series of portraits, Paricio transforms expressive moments from art history into lively contemporary designs.

Through portraiture, Paricio explores the ways in which an artwork can become transcendental, uninfluenced by the fashions and trends of the present. This dialogue with his predecessors is rooted in a deep reverence for tradition and Paricio’s belief that, ‘If you don’t know where you come from, how can you know where you are going?’

 

If you are interested in adding to your collection speak to one of our art consultants now - email us info@halcyongallery.com

Contact us

    Atmospheric image Atmospheric image
    Atmospheric image Atmospheric image
    Atmospheric image Atmospheric image
    Atmospheric image Atmospheric image