Garden Futures
In a present shaped by synthetic environments and the gradual disappearance of the living, gardens emerge as sensitive capsules — reservoirs of memory, desire, and material experimentation. Far from any bucolic ideal, this collection approaches the garden as a contemporary device for thinking coexistence, attention, and transformation.
Each object gathered here acts as a fragment of speculative botany: forms that evoke the vegetal without mimicking it, surfaces that recall moss, damp soil, or the geometry of a fossilized leaf. These are artefacts born at the intersection of natural memory and design language — between the artisanal gesture and the conditions of digital domesticity.
Inspired by both real and imagined gardens, this collection unfolds as a choreography between species and matter. The objects do not preserve flowers but rhythms: transitions between seasons, materials, and forms of nature both lost and yet to come.
The collection offers a rereading of the domestic space as an expanded ecosystem, where the vegetal is not representation but latency. Each object is a gesture of silent presence.
Garden Futures — an invitation to explore how vegetal forms and seasonal echoes continue to shape the way we live with, perceive, and remember nature through the objects that surround us.