Rafael Triana’s practice investigates the symbolic and material construction of territory as a system shaped by processes of organization, control, and collective experience. Through installations and object-based works, he examines how spatial structures are internalized and reproduced, often before they are consciously inhabited.
Working with everyday materials and modular forms, his practice unfolds through strategies of accumulation, repetition, and displacement, revealing the tension between order and instability. What appears fixed emerges as provisional, open to transformation.
Rather than direct critique, his work proposes a reflective engagement with the mechanisms that organize collective life, inviting a reconsideration of the frameworks that shape perception, movement, and belonging.
Working with everyday materials and modular forms, his practice unfolds through strategies of accumulation, repetition, and displacement, revealing the tension between order and instability. What appears fixed emerges as provisional, open to transformation.
Rather than direct critique, his work proposes a reflective engagement with the mechanisms that organize collective life, inviting a reconsideration of the frameworks that shape perception, movement, and belonging.








