Living with Fragments of Nature in a World Shaped by Artificial and Digital.

Living with Fragments of Nature in a World Shaped by Artificial and Digital.




A Private Flora

In a world increasingly shaped by artificial systems and digital abstraction, the presence of nature within our most intimate spaces — our homes — has acquired new urgency. We seek not merely to decorate with flora, but to integrate it: as metaphor, as memory, as a tactile encounter with something beyond ourselves.

 

Botanical Gestures

Garden Futures is a curatorial meditation on this longing. Through a series of silver-plated objects — bananas, lemons, flowers, and spoons that unfold like petals — the collection invites us to reimagine the presence of the vegetal within the domestic. These are not reproductions of fruit, nor nostalgic souvenirs of nature, but sculptural interpretations that blur boundaries between organic form and crafted artifact.

In each piece, the wildness of the garden meets the refinement of the table. A flower becomes a spoon. A fruit becomes a mirror of time. The familiar is abstracted, made strange, and thus newly visible. These micro-sculptures operate as both utensils and symbols — portals, perhaps, to a more attentive way of inhabiting space.

This collection does not aim to replicate nature, but to question how it lives with us. What does it mean to bring a forest into a drawer, a vineyard onto a shelf, a garden onto the table? What gestures — ritual, aesthetic, or absurd — emerge when objects reference the outside world within a sheltered interior?

 

The Ecology of Interiors

If nature is increasingly mediated by screens and simulations, then these pieces reclaim a tactile proximity. They whisper of nourishment, of growth and decay, of seasonal rhythms and the fragility of life forms. But they do so not with reverence, but with subtle irony and joy — refusing purity, embracing hybridity.

The domestic becomes a place of interface. Here, the vegetal is not decoration but dialogue. Each object reminds us that nature is not out there, but within: shaped by human hands, interpreted through material, carried into the rituals of everyday life. Between ornament and function, poetry and utility, Garden Futures proposes a quiet, critical intimacy with the world we are part of.

Discover Garden Futures.