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MATéRICA
MATéRICA unfolds as an inquiry into matter understood not as a support, but as a subject in itself. The sculptures do not depict stone; they operate as mineral bodies, formed through accumulation, pressure, and transformation. Ceramic functions here as a field of negotiation between control and material agency, where fire is not a technique but a deciding force. The surface becomes a site of material inscription. Glazes reveal real processes: fusion, gravity, oxidation, generating tonal variations that arise not from compositional intent but from the internal logic of matter itself. There is no uniform finish, no decorative gesture; every difference is consequential. Creams, mineral greys, and dense browns emerge as states of material rather than symbolic color. Fine…
MATéRICA
MATéRICA unfolds as an inquiry into matter understood not as a support, but as a subject in itself. The sculptures do not depict stone; they operate as mineral bodies, formed through accumulation, pressure, and transformation. Ceramic functions here as a field of negotiation between control and material agency, where fire is not a technique but a deciding force. The surface becomes a site of material inscription. Glazes reveal real processes: fusion, gravity, oxidation, generating tonal variations that arise not from compositional intent but from the internal logic of matter itself. There is no uniform finish, no decorative gesture; every difference is consequential. Creams, mineral greys, and dense browns emerge as states of material rather than symbolic color. Fine, discontinuous black and white traces cross the volumes as residual actions, bearing the fragility of the hand and the resistance of the body. They do not describe; they testify.
Published: January 26th 2026