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Amor que no muere, mata

"Amor cuando no muere mata, amores que matan nunca mueren"
“Undying love kills, love that kills never dies” Joaquín Sabina
Razerblade intervention, which can be related to art produced by Chema Madoz or Joan Brossa in their dialogue with everyday objects, such as Dali’s Lobster Telephone in the Tate Gallery
(London) or the many Brossa’s objects in the Miró Foundation in Barcelona.

An object trouvée which meaning is altered through a metaphoric interpretation of its attributes and function:sharp cutting. By a small intervention in the central slot from a circle to a heart we can move to a different realm. Once we have reached the symbolic plane, and heightened the
many functions, we can play with concepts such as killing and love, at the symbolic level the function is unaltered.

Amor que no muere, mata
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Amor que no muere, mata

Sculpture

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Creative Fields