LISA GINGLES
Irish Visual Artist Based in Valencia
Artistic Background and Cultural Influences
Lisa Gingles, an Irish visual artist based in Valencia, Spain since 1998, was born in Northern Ireland in 1974 and trained in Fine Arts at Ulster University. Her art reflects a nomadic lifestyle shaped by encounters with diverse cultures and traditions—resulting in a heterogeneous body of work where mixed techniques and materials are a defining feature.
Themes of Identity, Memory, and Transformation
Gingles draws inspiration from travel, memories, folklore, and mythology. Her works—often melancholic and evocative—explore themes such as identity, the passage of time, and personal transformation. Faceless portraits, dreamlike landscapes, and mythological beings populate her imaginative universe, encouraging viewers to step into a world where reality and fantasy coexist.
A Multidisciplinary and Symbolic Approach
Using a wide range of materials and techniques—from drawing and collage to sculpture—Gingles creates works that defy traditional artistic classifications. Her compositions are deeply symbolic, inviting contemplation on the human condition, memory, and time’s inevitable passage.
TIMELESS ART
TIMELESS ART: HEIGHTENED PERCEPTION OF REALITY
The common thread of TIMELESS ART is realism—a language oscillating between classical tradition and evocative fantasy. This exhibition brings together contemporary artists who share exceptional technical mastery while diverging in vision to explore the boundaries of the real and the imaginary.
The gallery becomes a space of serene contemplation, where viewers can immerse themselves in works of technical virtuosity and conceptual depth. Here, realism is not merely a faithful representation of the world but a starting point for amplifying perception: details intensify, emotions deepen, and reality is reinterpreted.
Some artists present reality with near-hyperbolic sharpness, inviting us to notice what would ordinarily go overlooked. Others introduce fantastical or symbolic elements that transform the everyday into something extraordinary.
Guided by the concept of “windows to possible worlds,” each piece acts as a portal into personal and poetic universes, where technical mastery is the key that unlocks new ways of seeing and feeling.
TIMELESS ART is an invitation to lose ourselves in the beauty of figuration and to engage with scenes that will resonate long after we leave the gallery.
DREAMLAND
The feeling that Dreamland awakens is the illusion of being in a place where fantasy truly exists.
Upon entering, we dissolve—wand-waving—the armor that has forced us to grow up in the worst possible way. And pure joy emerges, the joy of discovering a space where imagination has been crowned atop the dreams of others.
Conscious dreams, born from the skilled minds of master artists.
Here, we are all Alice, plunging—from the edge of a child’s diving board who never wanted to disappear—into the adventure of a surprise journey.
We look around carefully, we choose, and we take the invisible hand of the creator, the Artist, to chromatically blend ourselves with that dream we would have loved to have.
Because in truth, dreams are not chosen: they happen. And they happen freely, whether we like them or not.
Tender, powerful, terrifying, dystopian, romantic, destructive, glamorous, sensual, labyrinthine, chaotic—that is the indestructible world of dreams. Free, plural, and random.
Dreamland offers us, like the best cinema, the illusion of choosing a room with a view of a dream that isn’t ours, but that we adore.
Bring popcorn!
INNER STREET
Art characterizes us as a species. It is in the essence of our nature.
Before writing, we already knew how to represent the animals around us pictorially, with anatomical precision. Our symbolic ability has made us the humans we are today.
It is undoubtedly strange that sometimes Art is not given the importance it deserves. The need of expressing ourselves through painting, engraving, or sculpture is an intrinsic part of our evolution.
It has been observed that in some prehistoric caves, different tribes have intervened in the same space over various periods, even altering the meaning of previous representations. It is not difficult to link these interventions with contemporary Urban Art. The artists express themselves but do not become the owners of the spot. Once the artwork is finished, it remains in a space exposed to the creative freedom of the next person.
In the collective exhibition INNER STREET, we wanted to recreate, through the artists’ interventions on the walls of the gallery, the impermanent spirit of Urban Art. The works represented on the walls will cease to exist when the exhibition ends. Not to be replaced by better art, but by different art. Time passes inside the gallery just as it does on the street—never stopping.
FIGURATIVE FANTASY
In the collective show Figurative Fantasy, we have the feeling of having created a catalog of portals to other worlds.
Our desire is that the viewer manages to find in the works that symbiotic sensation that approaches us suddenly, when our DNA and that of the artist are combined spontaneously. The artist, through his discourse, is capable of enveloping us in his fantasy, which at that moment also becomes our own.
Marrying our sensibility with that of another human being is something tremendously delicate, it either happens or it doesn’t happen. There is art that leaves us indifferent and art that captures us.
Often we are attracted to a familiar aesthetic, especially the one we have grown up with, a visual language we have lived with and have already deciphered, so it is not a challenge for us, since it is part of our imaginary.
But sometimes we find a form of expression that shocks us, sometimes we may even dislike it at first, but for some reason it keeps our curiosity, our desire to observe and see what it means and why. And right at that moment it is possible that the artist has opened a new world for us.
The instant in which the spectator communes with a new form of expression is the instant in which his mind has begun to interpret and integrate a new language, a different symbology, a new way of interpreting color, form or technique. This new acquired knowledge will nestle inside him, enriching his visual culture.
Understanding different modes of expression enriches our way of perceiving reality. Artists gift us with small pieces that help us to understand an intensely diverse world.









































































