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Pear
1.600,00€
Original on wood’s board
115 x 100 cm
2025
The Recomposition of Desire: The Pear
An explosion of warm and earthy tones, fading from moss green to amber gold. The precision is near-photographic: the grainy skin, the soft curve of the belly, and the slender stem; every detail of the pear seems to pulse with a mature, silent life. Then, a radical intervention: the blade cuts through the perfect image, fragments it into shifting sections, and disassembles it. Yet, this is not destruction. It is a geometric dissection of our organic perception.
This “maniacal” precision forces us to confront a pear that is no longer just a fruit, but an architectural memory. The intensity of the color and the softness of the form are amplified precisely through its fragmentation. The lines of the cut create a broken rhythm, a visual dissonance that destabilizes the eye and confuses the senses: the silhouette stretches and shifts, offering us an image that is simultaneously familiar and foreign.
Traditional aesthetics are shattered, sparking an unexpected emotional enthusiasm: the beauty of the unforeseen. The work reminds us that the world is never as clean and orderly as we would like, and that true harmony often resides precisely within its imperfections, within its deliberate fractures.
In moments of rupture, after experiences that have fragmented our idea of self and reality, reconstruction does not necessarily have to aim for a return to the previous order. It can lead to something new, something layered and, for that very reason, incredibly fascinating.
In an era of digital perfectionism, where every form is polished, this broken pear is a cry of rebellion. It embraces chaos, celebrates complexity, and manages to find elegance even in ruins. Through this decomposition and subsequent recomposition, we discover new dimensions of desire and new ways of seeing the world—and ourselves.
After every break, there is a recomposition, a new form that emerges from the debris. And like this disassembled pear, our new structure can be even more intense, more complex, and infinitely truer than the original.
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