All images © Felipe de Ávila Franco. The use of any image from this site is prohibited unless prior written permission from the artist is obtained.
All images © Felipe de Ávila Franco. The use of any image from this site is prohibited unless prior written permission from the artist is obtained.
Supported by:
Supported by:
Installation, 2010 Asphalt collected pieces Variable dimensions
Sculpture, 2010 Bricks, mirrors, iron tap, water, and electro-mechanics 60x50x40cm
Sculpture, 2010 Wood, aluminum, brass, galvanized and bricks 180x180x50cm
Sculpture, 2010 Chemically aged steel sheet 65x80cm
Installation, 2010 Bricks, crushed bricks, wood frame and glass 120x180cm
Installation, 2010 Asphalt collected pieces Variable dimensions
Sculpture, 2010 Bricks, mirrors, iron tap, water, and electro-mechanics 60x50x40cm
Sculpture, 2010 Wood, aluminum, brass, galvanized and bricks 180x180x50cm
Sculpture, 2010 Chemically aged steel sheet 65x80cm
Installation, 2010 Bricks, crushed bricks, wood frame and glass 120x180cm
Provoked Archaeologies #2
Installation, 2019
Excavated soil in the Amazonia rainforest, branches, and sisal rope
Variable Measures
The last man on Earth, 2019
The work is inspired by the book Last and First Men, a scientific novel written in 1930 by the British writer Olaf Stapledon. The book describes the Earth two billion years ahead of us when a future race of humans is on the verge of extinction. Almost all that remains in the world are solitary and surreal concrete monuments, transmitting their message to the desert, witnessing the collision between notions of time, history, and oblivion.
The last man on Earth
Sculpture/object, 2019
Concrete and dust collected from urban sites.
32x38x45cm