

Felipe Pantone’s artistic practice started at just twelve years old, when he began painting graffiti in Torrevieja, a town in the south of Spain. Today, Pantone is most celebrated for his murals—which have been commissioned by the Palais de Tokyo in Paris and the Albright Knox in Buffalo, New York—that blend the aesthetics of graffiti with digitized prismatic forms that are often modeled on a computer prior to their execution. Pantone views this blending of digital and urban aesthetics as a logical melding of the modern visual lexicon. Among his many exhibitions throughout the world, Pantone has had solo shows at Studio55 in Tokyo, GR Gallery in New York, Mirus Gallery in San Francisco, among dozens of other spaces.


Felipe Pantone’s artistic practice started at just twelve years old, when he began painting graffiti in Torrevieja, a town in the south of Spain. Today, Pantone is most celebrated for his murals—which have been commissioned by the Palais de Tokyo in Paris and the Albright Knox in Buffalo, New York—that blend the aesthetics of graffiti with digitized prismatic forms that are often modeled on a computer prior to their execution. Pantone views this blending of digital and urban aesthetics as a logical melding of the modern visual lexicon. Among his many exhibitions throughout the world, Pantone has had solo shows at Studio55 in Tokyo, GR Gallery in New York, Mirus Gallery in San Francisco, among dozens of other spaces.