work
RGB-01
| category | Installation |
| subject | Architecture, Abstract |
| tags | |
| base | 251 cm |
| height | 251 cm |
| depth | 251 cm |
| year | 2025 |
RGB-01 is an environmental installation that reflects on the perception of the image both internal and external. It is a constant play of layers between color, plastic material, and digital video.
The cube, a perfect and rational form, is made of colored bubble wrap painted with acrylics, a fragile material, commonly used to protect what is delicate. In this installation, the bubble wrap becomes both protagonist and pictorial support, taking on an autonomous and independent value.
Inside the cube, a video is projected, documenting the various stages of layering the material onto the surface. The viewer is thus confronted with an object that seems to want to protect or preserve something, yet at the same time to expose it. The cube transforms into a transparent cell, a metaphor for the creative act: something protected yet exposed, solitary yet shareable.
The viewer is invited to look, but never fully. The bubble wrap distorts, filters, and conceals. The visual experience is mediated, just as every perception of artistic creation is when seen from the outside.
This raises a series of questions: to what extent can we truly see the inner process of the one who creates? And again, which part of ourselves is ready to be seen, and which remains hidden? What are the limits of creating and of painting itself?
The cube, a perfect and rational form, is made of colored bubble wrap painted with acrylics, a fragile material, commonly used to protect what is delicate. In this installation, the bubble wrap becomes both protagonist and pictorial support, taking on an autonomous and independent value.
Inside the cube, a video is projected, documenting the various stages of layering the material onto the surface. The viewer is thus confronted with an object that seems to want to protect or preserve something, yet at the same time to expose it. The cube transforms into a transparent cell, a metaphor for the creative act: something protected yet exposed, solitary yet shareable.
The viewer is invited to look, but never fully. The bubble wrap distorts, filters, and conceals. The visual experience is mediated, just as every perception of artistic creation is when seen from the outside.
This raises a series of questions: to what extent can we truly see the inner process of the one who creates? And again, which part of ourselves is ready to be seen, and which remains hidden? What are the limits of creating and of painting itself?











