The human being is one of the animals with the greatest capacity to adapt to the environment. Since time immemorial, our fellow beings have inhabited this planet from the most paradisiacal to the most extreme places, either because of their climate, access or proximity to drinking water.
Our presence on this planet is easy to follow because of the large amount of waste we generate, thanks to which archaeologists and anthropologists can launch the most diverse theories to try to explain our existence. This “garbage” is often a problem for other species with which we coexist, but in other cases it is favorable for others, who use these remains for their own benefit. This positive aspect is the one I focus on when proposing this exhibition.
A place is a place, a house, a space, an architectural remnant… whose names I don’t want to remember because sometimes they are real places -which I paint more or less in the state in which I find them-, and many other times (the most) they are real or invented places that I transform, I imagine them in a time in which the human is no longer present but past. This new time in which things created by humans acquire a new utility for other species seems very interesting to me.
The images in this exhibition basically show used architectures invaded by water and plants. In the case of those that are flooded, sometimes faceless people appear, spectators of a time that is coming to an end. The following images are full of life, nature takes over the spaces.

