The spectacular space of the Lonja de Palma hosts the exhibition Mirall, two sculptures made of braided stainless steel that represent a man and a woman asking for silence with their fingers and that offer a fluid dialogue between art and architecture.
In the centre of this Gothic building stand Invisible Laura and Invisible Rui, which, with their seven metres in height, are situated facing each other, with their backs to the main entrance. These figures symbolise contrasting tensions: body and soul, matter and spirit, light and darkness, opacity and transparency, past and future.
Jaume Plensa (Barcelona, 1955) establishes a parallel with Janus, the Roman god with two faces, one looking to the past and the other to the future, offering a key to interpreting the essence of the exhibition.
Vista is the first solo exhibition of British artist Fiona Rae to be held in Spain. The exhibition brings together a selection of works created ...
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Miró's most experimental stage: found objects, “discarded” materials and the art of looking at everyday life ...
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Cineforum series at CaixaForum Palma
A film club open to all audiences (with a special focus on senior audiences) to watch films as a ...
Climb up to the terraces to see Palma from above: bay, bell tower, flying buttresses and rose window (guided tours in shifts)
If ...
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