Maria Saygua André

Maria Saygua André (Bolivia, 1996) is a Franco-Bolivian textile artist and sculptor. She lives and works in Brussels.

The door - 2019

215 x 100 x 2 cm, Tapestry, cotton, wool

This woven monochrome, black when seen from afar, blue when approached, is an opening in which one can lose oneself. The opacity of the threads absorbs the light and places this door to scale in a new
space. An esoteric, committed, magical dialogue is born of darkness and light. Between dream and reality of the object, the welf plays a large part of ourselves.

The door - 2019

215 x 100 x 2 cm, Tapestry, cotton, wool

This woven monochrome, black when seen from afar, blue when approached, is an opening in which one can lose oneself. The opacity of the threads absorbs the light and places this door to scale in a new
space. An esoteric, committed, magical dialogue is born of darkness and light. Between dream and reality of the object, the welf plays a large part of ourselves.

The door - 2019

215 x 100 x 2 cm, Tapestry, cotton, wool

This woven monochrome, black when seen from afar, blue when approached, is an opening in which one can lose oneself. The opacity of the threads absorbs the light and places this door to scale in a new
space. An esoteric, committed, magical dialogue is born of darkness and light. Between dream and reality of the object, the welf plays a large part of ourselves.

The door - 2019

215 x 100 x 2 cm, Tapestry, cotton, wool

This woven monochrome, black when seen from afar, blue when approached, is an opening in which one can lose oneself. The opacity of the threads absorbs the light and places this door to scale in a new
space. An esoteric, committed, magical dialogue is born of darkness and light. Between dream and reality of the object, the welf plays a large part of ourselves.