Hxoro originates from a worn copy of Psychology by Peter Green (first edition, 1999, p. 445), abandoned in a box on a roadside in Bushwick (Brooklyn) during a rainy day in the 2020 lockdowns. In it, it was written about...
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Hxoro originates from a worn copy of Psychology by Peter Green (first edition, 1999, p. 445), abandoned in a box on a roadside in Bushwick (Brooklyn) during a rainy day in the 2020 lockdowns. In it, it was written about the moment — just after their first year of life — when children begin to offer objects to others as a way of testing reactions, initiating contact, and creating a shared language even with strangers.
In the last year, Hxoro project “Humanity for Humans” included public installations, sculptures & prints born as clandestine gestures carried out in public spaces. Human parts rising from water, reaching for the sky, disrupting the monumental quiet of the city. They do not ask only for attention, but for presence, community. His work operates on the threshold between poetry and political act, between intimacy and the collective sphere. It is Relational Public Art and it generates attention from local communities.