Epidermide is a description of what it simply is, which is a processing of carpet scraps and skins from the textile industry, some dyed and some treated. The work is articulated as an abstract figure that becomes landscape, crumbling through the insertion of stitched green threads reminiscent of paths, natural elements, a handmade that evokes a tradition and a primordial aspect. The work addresses the issue of the gap between culture and tradition, through feelings of attraction and repulsion the sacred/sacrificial aspect emerges given by the use of animal skins that regain body and mutate into landscape. The durability of the work is dictated by the wear and tear of time, by the decomposition of the material used, which questions both the very durability of landscapes but also of works of art.