Current investigation (Una Práctica de Porosidad continued 2025 - Present)

A Practice of Porosity is a living research project that holds space for what is left behind. There is a gentleness in decay, an intelligence that inhabits things as they open towards their own undoing.


2026: Residency Hangar Barcelona, ES

2026: Residency Casa RARO,  Barcelona, ES

2026: Residency Maker Sherpa, Convent Sant Augusti, Barcelona, ES  


Since Feburary 2026 I have iniciated a series of residency programmes which have allowed me to continue my exploration of A Practice of Porosity. 

A pore is a minimal opening through which to pass, sweat, breathe, and disintegrate. Porosity refers to the proportion of a material’s volume that consists of a network of voids. From these voids, processes of circulation, oxidation, and filtration, among others, take place,  embodying a constant tension between resistance and vulnerability, between fluidity and rigidity.

In my research, porosity becomes a methodology of artistic creation, a way of opening my practice so that it can be traversed, allowing the wear of time to become an active part of the process. From this dialogue, I question how fragility can generate care, how matter becomes language, and how subtlety enables forms of permanence.
Practicing porosity allows me to inhabit decomposition and sustain sensitivity within contexts of accelerated change and deep erosion. I am interested in the slow companionship between movement and erosion: how objects continue to act as they deteriorate, understanding these conditions as forms of material intelligence. Oxidation, wear, or malfunction reveal how objects actively participate in the world.

This research emerged from a process of composting my own artistic archive in 2023, during a science communication residency at the Humboldt Foundation in Berlin, which coincided with my Humedal I residency at the Wetlab of Hangar, Barcelona.

Revisiting the limits of language to envision possible futures through Alexander von Humboldt’s taxonomies allowed me to understand that, like organic matter, language erodes over time, becoming fertile ground for new configurations of thought. In nature, waste does not exist; allowing words to fragment, decompose, and nourish what has not yet germinated. From this place, I accumulated residual materials, fragments of work, and process writings, reorganizing them as a fertile ground for research.

Through this practice, porosity emerged as a necessary condition for decomposition to occur and reorganize into new forms of intimacy. Over time, this process deepens and continues to be nourished by its own layers.

With the support of the current residencies investigating at, I am currently researching and systematizing this methodology in a replicable and open way, in order to build more situated and sensitive modes of creation.