Carrer de Can Sanç 13, 07001, Palma de Mallorca, Spain
Open: Mon-Fri 11am-3pm, Sat by appointment
Thu 4 Jun 2026 to Sat 5 Sep 2026
Carrer de Can Sanç 13, 07001 Estevan Davi: Pagan Tales: The Golden Moon
Mon-Fri 11am-3pm, Sat by appointment
Artist: Estevan Davi
Baró Mallorca presents Pagan Tales: The Golden Moon, the first solo exhibition in Spain by Brazilian artist Estevan Davi, with a critical text by Iñaki Martínez. The presentation takes place during Art Palma Summer 2026, the annual program of coordinated gallery openings across the island. Following his participation in the group exhibition Cannibal Nature in Mallorca in 2025, this project marks the artist’s first solo exhibition with the gallery and his return to the island.
Pagan Tales: The Golden Moon constitutes the third chapter of a body of work that began with A Queda do Primeiro Sol in São Paulo in 2023 and continued with Dias Depois da Queda “O Clarão” at Galeria Vermelho in 2025. If earlier works introduced the fall of the sun as a central axis and later unfolded in the persistence of its remaining light, this exhibition shifts toward a different symbolic register structured around the image of a golden moon.
The exhibition unfolds as a constellation of works conceived as independent episodes connected through a shared symbolic field. References to different belief systems and mythologies are present throughout and are approached as structures that remain active and continue to organize narratives around life, death, desire and the sacred.
Working with concrete, iron and oil paint, Davi develops a practice grounded in material processes. The works are produced through oxidation, erosion and transformation, allowing water, earth, air and metal to act directly in their formation. The resulting pieces operate within a temporal condition in which past, present and future coexist.
In this exhibition, references to medieval and pre Renaissance visual traditions become more explicit, including fresco techniques and figurative compositions associated with religious imagery. These elements are combined with other symbolic repertoires, forming a field that remains open and in transformation.
The works presented here continue an ongoing research that unfolds across different exhibitions. Variations in scale, material and technique reflect the development of this investigation, while maintaining a consistent engagement with concrete, iron and painting as central elements.