Pérez Siquier. Fundación Mapfre Collections

FEB.26.2026    MAY.24.2026

A color photograph of a woman relaxing in the sun, wearing a floral bikini in shades of blue and green. She is on a sun lounger, her hair pulled back, and wearing accessories such as a blue headband and large white earrings. Her makeup includes white and blue eyeshadow. The image is vibrant and captures a retro, mid-20th-century style.

Carlos Pérez Siquier
Marbella, 1974
Fundación Mapfre Collections
© Pérez Siquier, VEGAP, Barcelona, 2026

Home > Art and Culture > Exhibitions > Past exhibitions > 2026 Exhibitions > Pérez Siquier. Fundación Mapfre Collections

Exhibition

 

FEB.26.2026​   MAY.24.2026

Where

KBr Photography Center
Avenida Litoral, 30 – 08005 Barcelona

Over the course of more than six decades, Carlos Pérez Siquier (1930–2021) built a singular body of work that transformed the way photography was understood in Spain. Working from Almería —far from the major artistic centers— he developed an intuitive and committed vision that broke away from the dominant models of his time. In a country marked by the cultural isolation of the postwar period and the dictatorship, he founded, together with José María Artero, the Almerian Photographic Association (AFAL), a collective that became a key reference for modernity and established a decisive dialogue between Spanish photographers and international movements. His first major series, La Chanca, begun in 1956 and influenced by cinematic neorealism, documents the daily life of a marginalized neighborhood with surprising dignity and closeness. These images did not seek to denounce, but rather to reveal the human vitality of a place seemingly suspended in time.

In the 1960s, Pérez Siquier made a decisive break by working in color at a pioneering moment —an approach that was initially met with incomprehension. In Informalisms, he explored painterly textures and abstractions, while in The Beach and Traps for the Unwary, he observed with irony, precision, and subtle humor how new leisure habits were transforming the Spanish coastline. His final projects, Encounters and La Briseña, more introspective in nature, distill a gaze attuned to the intimate rhythms of everyday life. Brought together in a single exhibition, these stages trace a comprehensive journey through the work of an artist who knew how to find the extraordinary within the ordinary, and who played a decisive role in the modernization of 20th‑century Spanish photography.

Curator: Eva Vives (Fundación Mapfre)

You may also like
Roger Tims, Jim Duncan, Leonard Markley and Don Belak, coal miners, Reliance, Wyoming, August 29, 1979
Interior of a bus full of passengers, with a blonde woman standing in the center looking towards the camera among seats and out-of-focus people.
Boat on calm water between stone walls in black and white
Bicycle leaning against a stone column beneath a porticoed gallery.