Pedro Paricio Artist spotlight Pedro Paricio Artist spotlight

Pedro Paricio

Artist spotlight
/

Pedro Paricio is an artist acutely aware of the surrounding world, its environment, history and traditions. Subsequently, his work holds a mirror to his ability to absorb, distil and create. This is evident in Paricio’s Tulips, where he transforms one of art history’s most favoured subjects into a monumental study of colour and form; in his reimagining of characters in Greek mythology in Venus, Flora, and Narcissus; and in his journey into the American landscape in his 2023-24 works Mulholland, Pacific Coast and Canyon Road. Across this body of work an unbridled and unfearful devotion to colour reigns, and this is certainly true once more in Paricio’s new paintings featured in Halcyon’s Summer Exhibition.

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

For Paricio, engagement with art historical traditions is an endeavour of deep devotion to his practice. Paricio has always been...
Pedro Paricio, Studio, Barcelona

For Paricio, engagement with art historical traditions is an endeavour of deep devotion to his practice. Paricio has always been open about citing his influences with names such as Pablo Picasso and Caravaggio celebrated by the artist. The newest body of work produced by Paricio is inspired by one of the greatest living British artists - David Hockney.

Hockney and Paricio are both shaped by their natural environment. In 1964, Hockney moved to Los Angeles. Away from the grey and dreary English weather, a world of warmth and colour opened its doors to the artist, transforming him and his artwork forever. The power of landscape is palpable in Hockney’s later works, seismically marked by his homecoming to Yorkshire in the late 1990s and his secondment to Normandy during the COVID-19 pandemic. Paricio’s connection with the natural landscape is informed by his home island of Tenerife, the largest of Spain’s Canary Islands. Tenerife is home to a diverse and dramatic landscape comprising volcanoes, laurel forests and sandy beaches, whose natural amalgamations form a bold and vibrant backdrop for its inhabitants.

‘I find inspiration in every place, everywhere. Walking on the street, in a forest. I see a colour, see a flower, see a light, the reflection of a leaf and some of the five voices I have speaking in my head, say, wow, you have something there. Think on it. And go paint.’
Pedro Paricio
In Timber Line, echoes of Hockney’s influence rings clear. Compositionally, the work immediately reads as a homage to Hockney’s gigantic...
Pedro Paricio
Timber Line , 2025
Acrylic on linen
119 x 167 cm
In Timber Line, echoes of Hockney’s influence rings clear. Compositionally, the work immediately reads as a homage to Hockney’s gigantic multi-canvas work Winter Timber, which is currently on show at the artist’s major retrospective at the Fondation Louis Vuitton, Paris. Both works feature a wooded landscape with sparsely leafed trees hinting at late autumn. A path cuts through the scene vertically and is populated by rows of timber. A half-cut tree sits in the foreground – its fate easily imagined by the piles of wood filling the pathway. Paricio’s landscape is tightly cropped and imbued with fantastical colours. The half-cut tree is given his signature treatment of vivid geometric shapes – often a focal point in Patricio’s oeuvre. A brilliant, Fauvist palette and approach to perspective is something Patricio shares with Hockney. The artists’ novel employment of colour and perspective infuses their landscapes with hues of joy and playfulness. Yet beyond their spirited surfaces, these landscapes are indicative of artists who are seriously concerned with pushing boundaries through their execution of colour and form.
When considering artistic explorations of swimming pools, Hockney’s iconic representations inevitably come to mind. His depictions of California in the...
Pedro Paricio
Pool, 2025
Acrylic on linen
94 x 105 cm

When considering artistic explorations of swimming pools, Hockney’s iconic representations inevitably come to mind. His depictions of California in the 1960s and 1970s, such as A Bigger Splash (1967) and Portrait of an Artist (Pool with Two Figures) (1972) cemented the swimming pool as a symbol of modern leisure. In Pool, Paricio dives headfirst into one of the most iconic motifs of 20th-century art history. The work takes a specifically Paricio-esque shape with the diving board rendered in colourful kaleidoscopic patterns – a scheme truly complementary to the fun and laid-back nature of its environment. The luminous reflections dance across the water in Hockney fashion, their fluidity standing in contrast to the rigid, flat blocks of colour found throughout the canvas.

 

‘In my painting there is no boundary between figurative and abstract.’
Pedro Paricio
Paricio’s Glacier landscape series takes inspiration from the watercolours Hockney produced during a trip to Norwegian and Icelandic fjords in...
Pedro Paricio
Glacier's, 2025
Acrylic on linen
200.5 x 119 cm

Paricio’s Glacier landscape series takes inspiration from the watercolours Hockney produced during a trip to Norwegian and Icelandic fjords in 2002. In both places the artist was enraptured by the light of the long days of late spring and summer. The interaction of light on the landscape is something Paricio has noted about his home of Tenerife, where the strong natural sunlight intensifies the colour of the natural landscape.

In Glacier's, Paricio’s exploration of colour and perspective is pushed further, as the formal properties of perspective dissolve and figurative and abstract meet on one canvas. This is achieved through the rendering of natural forms in electric colours, appearing on the canvas as superimposed masses of mountain, land and water. Paricio masterfully differentiates between this patchwork of colour further with the addition of carefully placed linework and expressive brushstrokes to denote texture and shape.

Paricio has affirmed that there is a piece of him in every painting. When studying his application of colour that seems remarkably clear. As a creator, Paricio acts as a prism, where strands of influence such as environment, lived experience, and art historical references are absorbed and refracted back onto the canvas. What follows are uniquely formed works of art that, while having firm roots in art historical tradition, emerge as deeply personal and novel renditions of his chosen subject. 

If you are intersted in adding to your collection speak to an art consultant today - info@halcyongallery.com

Summer Exhibition

Summer Exhibition

Contact us

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