An exact, authorised reproduction, faithful to the original in size, colour and texture. Produced in the laboratory using a cutting-edge method, Neoseries provides the same experience as the original work. Neoseries are unlimited, numbered, authorized, and certified by the artist, whom will receive royalties.
Gabriel Ordeig Cole (1954–1994) was a multifaceted and cross-disciplinary artist. Unbound by dogma, he crafted contexts and prototypes, imperfect and precise. The Ordeig phenomenon might be distilled as a fusion of functionalist transgression and Mediterranean sensuality. Or perhaps, it resides in the dualities of quality—warmth, sensuality—simplicity, serving as guiding principles of a singular ethic—aesthetic.
Through her practice, Bea Aiguabella explores the dichotomy between individuality and collectiveness. Taking elements of nature as a point of departure, Aiguabella investigates this disjunction through an extensive process of repetition.
Graduated in sculpture from the Escola Massana in Barcelona and known by his artistic name Enrique Barro, Enrique Bargunyó is a multidisciplinary artist who has focused his artistic work on painting, drawing, and sculpture.
Both born in 1924, Federico Correa and Alfonso Milá were schoolmates and went on to attend the same university. They both received their doctorates in architecture from the University of Barcelona and they established their architectural studio in 1953, interweaving their friendship with a professional partnership.





Snack sala juventud Real Club de Golf del Prat, El Prat de Llobregat
























Snack sala juventud Real Club de Golf del Prat, El Prat de Llobregat






















Claudia Valsells is a colourist and an artist. Strongly linked to colour since the beginning of her practice as a mural painter, she has partnered with architects and designers for over 20 years to define colours through her own studio arts&claus. After her expertise in colour trend prediction, she went a step further becoming an artist, trusting her instinct with colour to create her own chromatic language.
His closeness to nature while growing up in Sweden is clearly represented in his work, which constantly depicts plants and animals as ordinary "objects". Another recurring subject are everyday objects and garments, which he approaches with a fresh and dynamic organicism, much more characteristic of nature.
Carmen Galofré graduated in Fine Arts at Barcelona's Sant Jordi Faculty, where she learned her profession and where she has contributed to several exhibitions throughout her career. Galofré's work plays with perception, cleverly using strokes to distinguish porcelain from glass, leather from cardboard. She has exhibited worldwide, from London to Geneva.









































































































Montse Campins's work is characterised by her free, unfettered vision that includes an extensive aesthetic concept, not so much as a stylistic resource but as a harmony heralding simplicity. Always immersed in research and experimentation, Montse is interested in ancient techniques and in combining them with digital photography, video and storytelling.























Marcos Isamat draws with pencils ranging from 6B to 4H. The result of each type of pencil depends on the porosity and grain of the paper, which modulates the graphite. He uses conservation or handmade paper with hard-on-soft pencils to force the graphite into the cellulose and create a varnish effect. Light reflections are sharpened by erasing, revealing only the memory of the graphite.





























Sílvia Martínez Palou combines her work as a restorer of historic buildings with her artistic work. Palou mainly implements the traditional technique of monotype printing, which allows her to work on the originals using various experimental and plastic processes to achieve rich colours and textures.

























Influenced by 20th-century American realism, Bea Sarrias is a daughter of Barcelona, a city in which she has found the themes and places that govern the prevailing threads of her artistic work: architecture and light. Sarrias does not paint buildings; rather she depicts spaces.

























Influenced by 20th-century American realism, Bea Sarrias is a daughter of Barcelona, a city in which she has found the themes and places that govern the prevailing threads of her artistic work: architecture and light. Sarrias does not paint buildings; rather she depicts spaces.
Graduated as a sculptor from the Escola Massana in Barcelona, where he has lived for ten years, he shapes his main work with concrete and iron, materials that allow him to generate an intimate dialogue during the creative process as well as a reflection of an existential nature concerning essential aspects of life, such as nostalgia or the passage of time.
Naoki Kawano is captivated by delicate and sensitive materials and uses them to elicit a strong emotional response, harnessing their various textures to change the perception of viewers. He finds ways to use new materials to create a unique language of textures.
Carla Cascales is a contemporary artist born in 1989 in Barcelona, where she currently lives and works. She began work in the world of design, and this knowledge and way of working is reflected in her pieces, whether they are paintings, drawings or sculptures. Carla Cascales is a very versatile artist; she seeks a balance of organic materials and even makes her own.

Luia Corsini was raised between Rome and New York. Splitting her time between both cities, made her develop a deep interest in the beauty of two very different types of architecture. Captured by the cultural effervescence of both places, she decided to embark on a journey as an artist by studying Fine Arts at NYU.
Luia Corsini’s interest in Minimalism and Abstract Expressionism is key in her practice. Her pieces stem conceptually from Rosalind Kraus’ ideas presented in her essay Grids, where she describes the grid as a key concept to understand modern art.