Llindar


This exhibition subverts the gallery space by referring to the usual transitional spaces in the language of architecture, such as a prologue or a preamble, what is pronounced before, it is inspired by the entrances of buildings, it cites that which stands before, that which is placed in front, the vestibule of a narration.

Llindar, which in Spanish sounds like a verb, in Catalan means threshold, what you can find, for example, when you run into a door, when you draw the curtains, open a book, or close your eyelids. When you read a word that wasn't there, or when two objects collide delicately and make tin.

Perhaps like a fountain, llindar jumps and intrudes between what was and what will be, runs between the consonants, slips into the vowels, slipping in and out of the meaning, of the trembling political accent of the real, to be once again a fragile, spatial, theatricalizing exercise of fictions to come.

Fabian Ramos