At the heart of an era where everything seems to be established, it also seems that questioning deeply rooted concepts and pre-existing ideas is more interesting than it might appear at first glance.
In a context like today’s, where we jump from one thing to another thinking that we are the ones in charge of the conceptual leap between “x” and “y,” whoever claims that there is no “something” managing the connection between two things is defending a mistaken idea. Perhaps due to the frenetic pace, we fail to notice that there are links helping us follow the thread. Links that act as intersections. Intersections that connect planes and surfaces at a single point. We call these pre-existing intersections.
However, sometimes this type of intersection is managed in one way or another when something — a “what” — is added on top, helping us interpret it differently. That “what” already has a name: the plinth. Nevertheless, there is a present need to redefine both it and the concept itself. So then, let’s begin.
Re-socol-itzar
Re-socol-itzar
Re-socol-itzar

