Synthetic Garden develops through a network of suspended lines, textile elements, and spatial tensions. Rather than representing a landscape, the... Read More
Synthetic Garden develops through a network of suspended lines, textile elements, and spatial tensions. Rather than representing a landscape, the work proposes a fragile system of relationships in which each element depends on the others for its position and stability.
Wool, textile, steel wire, acrylic, and wood are assembled into a structure that oscillates between drawing, object, and installation. Vertical strands function simultaneously as boundaries, connections, and points of tension, while colored forms interrupt the linear order and introduce moments of imbalance and negotiation.
Part of my ongoing investigation into material transformation and interconnected systems, the work explores how stability emerges from dependency rather than control. What appears as a simple structure reveals itself as a precarious arrangement in which each component influences the whole.
The garden of the title is not a natural space but a constructed ecosystem—an environment shaped by tension, adaptation, and continuous adjustment.