Artist
Daniel Roibal
About Daniel Roibal
Rising star, based in the heart of London
Born in 1994 in Palma de Mallorca and now based in London, Daniel Roibal creates paintings where abstract forms and vivid colour meet quiet, personal traces. His works reflect on how human presence shapes—and unsettles—the natural world.
Roibal’s practice balances intensity and restraint: saturated colour fields are interrupted by subtle marks, fragments and symbols drawn from lived experience. The result is an intimate visual language that turns memory, movement and landscape into layered, contemplative surfaces.
His paintings have been shown internationally, including in Spain, the United Kingdom, South Korea, Hong Kong and China. Recent highlights span PANORAMA (Galería Fran Reus, Palma de Mallorca, 2023), Butterfly Effect (D‑Contemporary, London, 2024), Canopy of the Anthropocene (Hoseo ArtProjects, Seoul, 2024) and Art Actions (HartHaus, Hong Kong, 2025). Solo presentations include Pilotism: The Millennium Nomads (Beijing, 2024) and Mindscape from the Chair (LABIBI+REUS, Spain, 2025).
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Education
MA Painting, Royal College of Art, London — 2024–2025
BA (Hons) Fine Art, Chelsea College of Arts, University of the Arts London — 2021–2024
Exhibitions, Events & Showcases
Roibal’s exhibition history maps a young practice moving confidently across Europe and Asia, with projects that foreground colour, ecology and personal narrative.
Selected Group Exhibitions
PANORAMA — Galería Fran Reus, Palma de Mallorca (2023)
Butterfly Effect — D‑Contemporary, London (2024)
Canopy of the Anthropocene — Hoseo ArtProjects, Seoul (2024)
Art Actions — HartHaus, Hong Kong (2025)
Solo Exhibitions
Pilotism: The Millennium Nomads — Beijing, China (2024)
Mindscape from the Chair — LABIBI+REUS, Spain (2025)
Residency
Artist Residency — Palma de Mallorca, Spain (2025)
Did you know?
In 2025, Roibal returned to his birthplace for a residency in Palma de Mallorca—an experience that deepened his ongoing exploration of the human footprint on fragile environments. The tension between lush colour and precise, quiet gestures in his paintings often traces that encounter between memory, place and ecological change.