Matter transforms itself
to tell the invisible

MATTER

in the process of creating my works – even before they become metal – chamotte, leaves, bark, fabric, wax... build a reality of emptiness and fullness, transparency and opacity, lightness and heaviness. My works are born in this dialogue – an evocation of primal desire, a deep sense of expectation that has accompanied humanity since the beginning, vibrating in the primal desire for life and the need for love. It is the discovery that we cannot give ourselves what we seek. We can only desire.

Life unfolds in my poetic universe, where ochre, sepia, brown, green and red are never sharp or dissonant – the colours of nature, the breath of the earth. I allow matter to speak, to reveal itself, to become a vehicle for the deeper meanings revealed in the work. Materials meet, transform; they solidify, create forms in space; they melt, evaporate and disperse in the air like thoughts that become breath.

rganic material is the medium par excellence – the centre of energy space. An all-encompassing reality which, when it burns, has no defined dimensions; when it burns, it loses all measure and boundaries. It is the material of transformation: a refractory mixture hardens, liquid wax turns into bronze, polystyrene evaporates to be reborn as aluminium. Aluminium inhales black dust, becoming one with matter; fine as ash, sand symbolises the stage of maximum sublimation and is endowed with tragic, symbolic value.

I am fascinated by forms that contradict the status of an object. Sculptural abstraction plays an important role here. I create sculptures in which forms seem to be self-sufficient, in which there are no traces of the artist's hand or technical processes – no experience, no recognisable creative memory.

I always take into account the unexpected that the material offers. I accept its ‘unpredictability’, I respect the life of the material, I do not force it. Abstraction allows you not to say everything in order to say more. It reveals what cannot be said and what cannot be seen.

I often leave the material uncontrolled, creating space for devotion, space for trust in the Mystery – a place of openness to the breath of the Spirit. Thanks to abstraction and symbolism, I avoid idolatry, I do not enclose eternity, infinity and mystery in a solid form.

In the process of creating my works, fire becomes a place of encounter and exchange, not just a passage. With its embrace, it offers form the possibility of rebirth, a moment of catharsis – purification. I am fascinated by the relationship between form and decay in a shared space that allows them to be reconciled.

The form dissolves and recreates itself. Fire enables the transformation of matter into a ‘spirit’ that fills the work, giving a personal interpretation of the invisible fragment. Each flame consumes wax and organic substances, becoming a sign of the end that gives rise to a new form. The process of diffusion of materials fascinates me the most. Forms emerge from the altered flames, rich in an experience they did not have before. The mysterious power of fire changes their lives – the presence of absence, emptiness replacing fullness – becomes a pretext for prayer and meditation.

The moment captured in the action of fire is eternity in flame. I notice a close connection between the theme of the works, the material and the lost wax technique. The transformation in fire symbolically reflects the spiritual process of man – an encounter with God's Love, which radically changes and gives birth to new life.

Creation requires patient and careful waiting until the technique gives shape to the work, until the form cools down. You can see how the fuelled flames tear apart and simultaneously feed the material.

Time is important. The time of waiting, sometimes anxious, when the layer is minimal. The form survives the trial by fire – the moment of birth. Time carries a message, a thought or a ritual celebrated in each work.

Creativity lives on a timeline, consuming its moments like a flame that burns moments to give birth to new life. My works have different ‘gestation periods’ – some are created quickly, others remain unfinished for months. Sometimes I work on several pieces at once, in different stages of evolution.