"The Structure of Modernism" is a painting that is a metaphor for the vast thickets of modernist housing estates that were built in the second half of the 20th century in socialist countries. The metaphor transfers this familiar view, through a game of fantasy and imagination, into charming and naturalistic landscapes, like from the paintings of William Turner.
Social urban planning merges with the shape that was formed by nature, creating a unity with it, an inseparable structure that shows man and his construction from a broader perspective, just as we see construction activity in termite mounds.
This leads us to reflect whether man is so far removed in his architecture from the way other beings and structures of this Earth, on which he is supposed to live, are formed?