Collection: Caos y orden

This series springs from the impulse to draw on top of what’s already been drawn, to build through accumulation, to let images dissolve in their own repetition. Each sheet becomes a visual battlefield where drawings overlap, graze, crush, and merge, conjuring new forms—sometimes recognizable, sometimes barely echoes.

The final shape isn’t what matters; it’s the process, the insistent gesture, the passage between chaos and a semblance of order. I start from studies and drawings by classical artists—Michelangelo, Velázquez—that I re-signify through repetition and layering. I’m not trying to represent; I’m trying to invoke. Bodies unravel, faces multiply, structures deform under their own visual weight. There is a sense of ruin here, of echo, of noise.

These compositions aren’t just a formal exercise. They’re also a reflection on our image-saturated contemporary world. We live immersed in a constant visual bombardment that slowly deactivates our ability to look attentively. In these drawings I aim to capture that feeling: of being surrounded, engulfed, almost drowned in images, yet still finding, among the remnants, fragments of presence that endure.