Patchwork and heat-molded methacrylate.
Composition of four pieces:
· Patchwork / Methacrylate 1: 1.25 × 75 × 84 cm //
· Patchwork / Methacrylate 2: 1.12 × 97 × 65 cm
· Methacrylate Box “Boot”: 33 × 33 × 8 cm //
· Methacrylate Box “Bag”: 29 × 25 × 6 cm
TEXTILE CREATURES // 2025
Fashion, beyond its utilitarian function, is a language laden with cultural, emotional, and political meanings.
This project claims its artistic dimension through the creation of textile pieces that transcend commercial boundaries and address issues such as identity, memory, finitude, and gender. Inspired by theories from Foucault, Barthes, and Lipovetsky, as well as practices by artists like Mario Espliego and Martin Margiela, the work explores clothing as a corporeal archive: vintage garments—mainly discarded men’s suits—preserving traces of past lives and obsolete power systems. Through techniques of patchwork and deconstruction, “textile creatures” emerge to reveal the hidden: open seams, intervened linings, worn fabrics.
The question, “How would you dress if you knew you were going to die today?” guides the process, proposing clothing not as a social disguise, but as a second skin revealing our deepest truth. Thus, the project proposes a deconstruction of gender in clothing, dissolving binary boundaries and questioning the performativity of dressing. Masculine and feminine aspects are merged, undone, and reformulated into hybrid pieces that challenge hierarchies of gender, class, and consumption. Death, understood as a democratizing phenomenon, permeates the entire work: fabrics become textile memento mori that celebrate the imperfect and the ephemeral. In contrast to fast fashion and digital dematerialization, this project offers a tactile and slow approach, where the garments’ scars address the viewer directly. Ultimately, it is not about dressing bodies, but about questioning them. The resulting pieces are sensitive maps of individual and
collective memories that celebrate the beauty of fragility, wear, and lived experience.
Madrid, 2025
Composition of four pieces:
· Patchwork / Methacrylate 1: 1.25 × 75 × 84 cm //
· Patchwork / Methacrylate 2: 1.12 × 97 × 65 cm
· Methacrylate Box “Boot”: 33 × 33 × 8 cm //
· Methacrylate Box “Bag”: 29 × 25 × 6 cm
TEXTILE CREATURES // 2025
Fashion, beyond its utilitarian function, is a language laden with cultural, emotional, and political meanings.
This project claims its artistic dimension through the creation of textile pieces that transcend commercial boundaries and address issues such as identity, memory, finitude, and gender. Inspired by theories from Foucault, Barthes, and Lipovetsky, as well as practices by artists like Mario Espliego and Martin Margiela, the work explores clothing as a corporeal archive: vintage garments—mainly discarded men’s suits—preserving traces of past lives and obsolete power systems. Through techniques of patchwork and deconstruction, “textile creatures” emerge to reveal the hidden: open seams, intervened linings, worn fabrics.
The question, “How would you dress if you knew you were going to die today?” guides the process, proposing clothing not as a social disguise, but as a second skin revealing our deepest truth. Thus, the project proposes a deconstruction of gender in clothing, dissolving binary boundaries and questioning the performativity of dressing. Masculine and feminine aspects are merged, undone, and reformulated into hybrid pieces that challenge hierarchies of gender, class, and consumption. Death, understood as a democratizing phenomenon, permeates the entire work: fabrics become textile memento mori that celebrate the imperfect and the ephemeral. In contrast to fast fashion and digital dematerialization, this project offers a tactile and slow approach, where the garments’ scars address the viewer directly. Ultimately, it is not about dressing bodies, but about questioning them. The resulting pieces are sensitive maps of individual and
collective memories that celebrate the beauty of fragility, wear, and lived experience.
Madrid, 2025
Disección textil de un bolso vintage en caja de metacrilato
· Caja metacrilato bota: 79 × 34 × 6 cm
Madrid, 2025
Disección textil de una bota vintage en caja de metacrilato
· Caja metacrilato bota: 33 × 33 × 8 cm
Madrid, 2025
Disección textil de un bolso vintage en caja de metacrilato
· Caja metacrilato bota: 29 × 25 × 6 cm
Madrid, 2025
Patchwork textil y metacrilato modelado por calor.
· Patchwork / metacrilato 2: 1,12 × 97 × 65 cm
Madrid, 2025
Patchwork textil y metacrilato modelado por calor.
· Patchwork / metacrilato 1: 1,25 × 75 × 84 cm
Madrid, 2025