In abandoned structures, use is not lost, but transformed. Walls once decorated with care now pulse with spontaneous graffiti. The sounds of human activity have given way to silence. Broken windows and doors leave space for sunlight and shadows to wander freely inside. As the day passes, light and shadow shift across the interior, much like the changing illumination in a Baroque cathedral, momentarily revealing layers of the interior: the graffiti, the crumbling walls, the scattered debris, and the forgotten corners.
Nature begins to reclaim the structure, with plants creeping into cracks. As the walls decay, they open up views of the surrounding landscape, offering a spectacular view of the sea or forest. A powerful contrast between the beauty of nature and of human construction, shaped by time and changing uses.
This exhibit captures a dialogue between destruction and color, emptiness and presence, vandalism and nature’s quiet care. In these ruins, color blooms alongside decay. Abandonment here is not an ending, but transformation.