
The name of this show is self-explanatory: all the works you can see are abstract, therefore formless, organic. I call them "geological" because of how the paint and wax behaved when exposed to hot air during the creation of the canvases, resembling volcanic explosions or craters formed due to the collision of space rocks with the Earth's surface. However, the abstractions caused by the reliefs of ink, wax, and paraffin that accumulate in bubbles or sparsely have no form. No way we could identify this shapeless paint, but in some way, now we can.
The name of this show is self-explanatory: all the works you can see are abstract, therefore formless, organic. I call them "geological" because of how the paint and wax behaved when exposed to hot air during the creation of the canvases, resembling volcanic explosions or craters formed due to the collision of space rocks with the Earth's surface. However, the abstractions caused by the reliefs of ink, wax, and paraffin that accumulate in bubbles or sparsely have no form. No way we could identify this shapeless paint, but in some way, now we can.