This
project talks about a home that the years have defined as a prison. It is a home
that oppresses freedom, creativity, ideas, dreams, perceptions and one's own
feelings. It is a true punishment cell that makes you an involuntary and often
unconscious victim of the aggressions that take place there. Paradoxically this
is a transparent cell because the inhabitant needs an opening to express the
oppression that falls on him. But while it gives him a margin of freedom, this
openness exposes him and leaves him defenseless, without intimacy and without
the possibility of regaining the strength and self-confidence that every home
should provide. Of course, this is a lesser evil. Transparency leaves him
without intimacy, true, but it allows him a way out of the hostility he finds
inside. And that is why we observe a human figure made of wire inside a wooden
box. The inhabitant of the box is disturbed by the pressure of the current
rhythm of life, the hostility of the cohabitants, the lack of space to rest and
the helplessness generated by the lack of intimacy. The wire allows visual
expression of concerns and insecurities. The wood makes it possible to
visualize the individual's clash with the rigid architecture of an
uninhabitable space that does not let him breathe.