Vigente.
The artist is exhibiting his celebrated work in coloured Indian ink, an innovative take on Surrealism-Abstract that has been shown in international venues such as the Louvre Museum in Paris.
The exhibition can be visited from the 22nd of May to the 15th of June, Monday to Friday, from 9.30am to 1.30pm in the Mojácar Museum's art gallery.
MOJÁCAR – The Mojácar Museum is hosting a solo exhibition by the painter Juan Ramón Jover Sánchez, known artistically as Jover. The Almerian artist, originally from the Campo de Níjar region, is presenting a carefully curated selection of his most representative works from his acclaimed NYMPHS series.
With a lengthy career spanning more than 120 exhibitions in countries such as the US (New York), France, Portugal and Belgium, Jover stands out on the contemporary art scene for his self-taught background and his constant experimental pursuit. After years dedicated to oil on canvas, the painter is currently immersed in a highly personal and innovative technique: coloured Indian ink.
Through this medium, the artist brings his Surrealist-Abstract vision to life. Jover's "Nymphs" are presented as ethereal and dreamlike compositions filled with a subtle chromatic balance. As mythological figures of an invisible nature, the painter deliberately plays with abstract forms so that it is the viewer's own imagination that, when contemplating the painting, completes the work, transforming it into suggestive feminine silhouettes.
The Mayor of Mojácar, Francisco García Cerdá, is delighted to have this art exhibition in the municipality, which further strengthens Mojácar’s close ties to art and culture.
This unique perspective and creative maturity have led to his work being acquired by multinationals such as the Swiss firm Syngenta and the American company VFM (whose silkscreen prints made it to the Spanish Royal Household), as well as having two of his works exhibited at the renowned Louvre Museum.
With this new cultural event, Mojácar becomes the epicentre of an interactive visual experience where colour, poetry, and the free interpretation of art come together