Pilgrim Notes
Palace of the Legislature
The artwork Pilgrim Notes, displayed here, is a graphic installation that reinterprets places visited by the artist at different moments in time. Through the process of memory and its documentation, these places transitioned from drawings and notes into a work featuring multiple processes and exhibition formats. Presented here are 6 of the 20 wooden plates worked with power tools that make up the complete installation, currently exhibited at the MAR Museum in Mar del Plata, along with 6 prints on fabric in blue tones on the reverse side of each panel. This set of wooden plates, carved on both sides, serves as engraving matrices and is arranged in relation to the circular space that contains them.
Buenos Aires, CABA - 28.10.2024
Palace of the legislature
The Buenos Aires Legislative Palace was completed in 1931. Architects Eduard Le Monnier and Héctor Ayerza drew inspiration for its design from 18th-century French Neoclassicism. The tower, standing 97 meters tall, houses a Westminster clock with four dials, each measuring 4.5 meters in diameter.
Pilgrim Notes
Palace of the Legislature
The artwork Pilgrim Notes, displayed here, is a graphic installation that reinterprets places visited by the artist at different moments in time. Through the process of memory and its documentation, these places transitioned from drawings and notes into a work featuring multiple processes and exhibition formats. Presented here are 6 of the 20 wooden plates worked with power tools that make up the complete installation, currently exhibited at the MAR Museum in Mar del Plata, along with 6 prints on fabric in blue tones on the reverse side of each panel. This set of wooden plates, carved on both sides, serves as engraving matrices and is arranged in relation to the circular space that contains them.
Buenos Aires, CABA - 28.10.2024
Palace of the legislature
The Buenos Aires Legislative Palace was completed in 1931. Architects Eduard Le Monnier and Héctor Ayerza drew inspiration for its design from 18th-century French Neoclassicism. The tower, standing 97 meters tall, houses a Westminster clock with four dials, each measuring 4.5 meters in diameter.
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