Reflection

Sculpture as a shelter

Throughout history, humanity has sought happiness and the relief of suffering as something to be achieved. Today, this pursuit fragments into spiritual disciplines, immediate consumption, and digital hyperconnectivity—always placing well-being somewhere else, in a future moment.

Animals, by contrast, do not seek; they simply exist. They inhabit the present with a simple and complete awareness. In them—and, closely, in dogs—emerges an honest way of being in the world. Not as an external lesson, but as an essential reminder: there is nothing we lack. We are nature. In times of crisis, when the illusion of control collapses, this truth becomes even more evident.

Nature Shelter
Nature Shelter

In the wild, things just are

In this exhibition, the work approaches nature as a reminder: it is not about pursuing a state, but about recognizing what is already here.
Animals do not seek. They don’t struggle to be in the here and now; they simply exist, inhabiting the moment with a surrender that requires no method or effort.
In them, consciousness is simple and complete.
But dogs teach us something more, something evident: the ability to relate through simplicity and honesty.
Yet this is not an external lesson. It’s not that animals possess something we lack, but rather a reminder that we ourselves are nature.
This becomes even clearer in times of crisis, when the illusion of control collapses.
Then, animals become mirrors of something already within us, waiting to be recognized.