

Kora Moya Rojo paints dreams that taste like memory. Born in Spain in 1993 and now calling Mexico City home, Kora's work lives in the delicious tension between what was, what is, and what could bloom tomorrow. Her paintings blend the sensual with the surreal, weaving together floral fantasies, market magic, and the kind of belonging that transcends borders.
At Lola, Kora presents two works that capture her signature alchemy. Bajo la Luz del Tianguis transforms the everyday wonder of Mexican markets into something mythic—where fruits become hybrids of imagination and the pink light filtering through awnings turns reality rosy. La Llorona emerges from her exploration of eternal flower arrangements, those that exist only in memory and dream, never wilting, always blooming.
Working with watercolor, acrylic, and oil, Kora constructs worlds where identity shifts like light through fabric, where displacement becomes a kind of dance, and where the familiar grows strange and the strange feels like home. Her vibrant palette draws from Luis Barragán's mastery of color and the pre-Hispanic soul of the tianguis, those ancient nomadic markets that still pulse through Mexico City's veins.
