Collection Océano
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Collection Océano

Collection Océano – For the Oceans to Breathe Again”, labelled “La Mer en Commun” as part of France’s “Year of the Ocean 2025”, led by the Ministry of Ecological Transition 💫

A visual tribute to the beauty, richness, and fragility of the seas: a call to awareness and action to protect the oceans, an essential condition for their survival, and therefore for that of humanity.

Mythical gods embody our contradictions, our attachments, our hopes. Their faces are the symbolic guardians of a marine world in peril

Profondeurs evokes a silent, fragile underwater world, where light flickers under external chaos. An abstract, sensory tribute to the invisible life that is vital to our planet’s balance.
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PROFONDEURS

“Profondeurs” evokes a silent, fragile underwater world, where light flickers under external chaos.
An abstract, sensory tribute to the invisible life that is vital to our planet’s balance.

Triptyque HUIXTOCIHUATL  Partie 3 : « I can’t breathe » 2025, © Patricia PIERRE GOMEZ BARANDA, Huile sur toile 80x65 cm
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I CAN’T BREATHE

I Can’t Breathe is a silent scream — a nearly colorless canvas where the ocean has vanished, lifeless. Inspired by the devastation of bottom trawling and electric pulse fishing, this final piece from the Océano collection mourns marine life lost and calls for urgent change.

« Neptune » 2025, © Patricia PIERRE GOMEZ BARANDA, Huile sur toile 73x60x4cm
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NEPTUNE

Neptune, the Roman god of the seas, does not appear here as the aging sovereign of legends, but as a young guardian, standing at the threshold of adulthood; Part of the Océano collection, this portrait pays tribute to the fragile beauty of the seas and to the younger generations rising to defend them.

Here is the English translation of your text: --- The colors have faded, the shapes have hardened. Her face is solemn, her headdress imposing. Huixtocihuatl rises, no longer to reign, but to protect. She embodies the struggle of marine species against pollution, destruction, and oblivion. She is the force that refuses to disappear.
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FURY

The colors have faded, the shapes have hardened. Her face is solemn, her headdress imposing.

Huixtocihuatl rises, no longer to reign, but to protect. She embodies the struggle of marine species against pollution, destruction, and oblivion.
She is the force that refuses to disappear.

Tlaloc, Aztec god of rain and springs, embodies the vital and ambivalent force of freshwater — life-giving yet destructive. His gaze warns us: without respect for water, there is no future. He speaks for dried rivers, broken mountains, and the storms to come.
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TLALOC

Tlaloc, Aztec god of rain and springs, embodies the vital and ambivalent force of freshwater — life-giving yet destructive. His gaze warns us: without respect for water, there is no future. He speaks for dried rivers, broken mountains, and the storms to come.

Poseidon and Neptune represent the tension between protection and power. By invoking them, I seek to bridge ancient wisdom with our present-day crisis — and to awaken a sense of urgency, reverence, and action. Because protecting the ocean GOES BEYOND just environmental it’s : deeply human.
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POSEIDON

Poseidon embodies the tension between protection and power.
Through him, I connect ancient wisdom to today’s crisis, to awaken urgency, respect, and action.
Because protecting the ocean is more than environmental : it’s deeply human.

Luvina
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Luvina

« Luvina » Oil on canvas, 50X70 cm
Inspired from a land of desert and silence, where souls fight to exist… Juan Rulfo’s raw visions meet Mexican muralism’s inspiration