The next one followed soon after, at the Circle of Fine Arts, and from then onwards to the present day. Exhibitions in different cities all over the world and also trips that have influenced his works, trips that were inspiring and enriching to him, as he says. He owns an extensive documentary archive, both visual and literary, in his travel notebooks, which began in 1981 on his first visit to Paris.
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Years later, he was invited to take part in a great experience thanks to his friend Joan Mesquida, who had met with Puebla del Rio’s mayor and convinced him that Maraver was an exceptional artist. In those days, he met the man who was in charge of the town hall’s cultural management; ‘El Grande’, who became his closest friend from then on, and who he refers to as his travel guide.
Thirty days among the wetlands. The place where he was born and where he now has the opportunity to reconnect with his roots. Painting by day and well into the night, surrounded by mosquitoes, bugs, pine forests, and grasslands, within one of the greatest wildlife areas in Spain. An exciting job in Doñana, which he describes in his diary as; summer 1989…. A meeting with his past, located in a house in Dehesa de Abajo, working in solitude, where the past of lagoons and streams now met the new extensions of rice fields.
1990 was an impetuous year for his interests, as he worked with Galeria Bennassar to prepare a collection that he would present at Arco, with one of the works he created in Doñana. He recalls those days due to the broadcasting of his activity, featuring in the TVE news programme where he was interviewed as the best young artist at the Contemporary Art Fair (Arco), highlighting the fact that all his works had been sold. Thanks to this appearance, he made many contacts that boosted his career, and he met Manolo Escobar, an art lover who became a close friend of his, a friendship that would last until his death. That same year, 1990, he spent three months in New York working on a painting about ants, which he entitled ‘Más de 1000’ (More than 1,000), and which was acquired by a prestigious collector. He met Roy Lichtenstein, an important pop artist, cartoonist, sculptor and jazz musician who, coincidentally, was also born on October 27. He met personally with the gallery owner Leo Castelli, who could brag about owning the world’s foremost art gallery between Madison and 5th Avenues in New York. It was during this period that he met the American actress Lauren Bacall. New York welcomed him, making him feel as if he could touch the sky, but it was a very fast pace, hard to bear.
He made the wise decision to return to Majorca to strengthen his relationship with Pilar, the love of his life. Luis, Pilar, and their daughter Marina all settled in Binissalem, and later their sons, Luis and Alejandro, were born.
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His exhibition list would be endless, as would his travels, anecdotes, adventures, friends, and admirers.
He has exhibited in countless places, in small and large formats, individually and collectively. New York, Frankfurt, Madrid, Paris, Cologne, Seville, London, Berlin, Valencia, Bologna, Granada, Zaragoza, Florence, Barcelona, Düren, Geneva, Santander, Ukraine, Valladolid, Moscow, Cadiz, Murcia, Munich, Athens, Cyprus, Pamplona, Menorca, Ibiza and Majorca are just some of these places.
In his travel notebooks, he always keeps a record of his travels, like delicate jewels made in sketches and watercolours. Kenya and Tanzania, Ukraine, Brazil, 1997/2000 Amazon, Peru, Rome, India, China, Morocco, Egypt, Berlin, Moscow and Jordan.
Morocco is one of the countries he has visited the most, attracted as he says he is by the atmosphere, markets, customs, people, and a rainbow of colours, which give him an energy that is hard to find anywhere else in the world, feeling as if time had stopped.
In 2023 he went to China with the artist Carlos Morell Orlandis, who allowed him to attend the University of Shanghai, where Morell works as a professor. There he prepared two master classes for students and teachers, based on his artistic technique. Curiously, it was on his birthday, so the students, and later on the professors, threw a party for him, grateful and impressed by Maraver’s explanations. He was invited to exhibit through HUELLART at the NINGBO Art Fair.
That same year, together with the NGO Llevant en Marxa, he travelled to Ethiopia and, coming from such an advanced place as Shanghai, he was struck by the contrast. For eleven days, he joined a group of doctors and nurses to visit the Mursi people, indigenous tribes who are unaware of technology and live in a rudimentary way as their ancestors did, with their rituals and traditions. These experiences bring Maraver closer to the land, the roots, to remote philosophies of life that he then captures with emotion on canvases and formats of all sizes, using textures, pigments, latex, pencils, varnishes, marble dust, metals, sands, straw, ashes, accelerators and other materials.
Maraver keeps astonishing himself with atavistic scenes, where he can glimpse the heartbeat of a human being who dwells far from technological futures.