es/en

ELONGATED PLATE

The Plates series explores the ritual of food through surfaces with different oval shapes and organic curves. Concave planes, like the palm of a hand, or the leaves of a tree, which receive food in a solid or liquid state and can contain it. The plate as an object is conceived as a ritual space and a landscape that connects us with plants and with our body.   

RECTANGULAR PLATE

The Plates series explores the ritual of food through surfaces with different oval shapes and organic curves. Concave planes, like the palm of a hand, or the leaves of a tree, which receive food in a solid or liquid state and can contain it. The plate as an object is conceived as a ritual space and a landscape that connects us with plants and with our body.

WOOD PLATES

The Plates series explores the ritual of food through surfaces with different oval shapes and organic curves. Concave planes, like the palm of a hand, or the leaves of a tree, which receive food in a solid or liquid state and can contain it. The plate as an object is conceived as a ritual space and a landscape that connects us with plants and with our body.   

ROUND PLATE

The Plates series explores the ritual of food through surfaces with different oval shapes and organic curves. Concave planes, like the palm of a hand, or the leaves of a tree, which receive food in a solid or liquid state and can contain it. The plate as an object is conceived as a ritual space and a landscape that connects us with plants and with our body. 

PLATES OF VARIOUS WOODS

The Plates series explores the ritual of food through surfaces with different oval shapes and organic curves. Concave planes, like the palm of a hand, or the leaves of a tree, which receive food in a solid or liquid state and can contain it. The plate as an object is conceived as a ritual space and a landscape that connects us with plants and with our body.

INLAID PLATE

The Plates series explores the ritual of food through surfaces with different oval shapes and organic curves. Concave planes, like the palm of a hand, or the leaves of a tree, which receive food in a solid or liquid state and can contain it. The plate as an object is conceived as a ritual space and a landscape that connects us with plants and with our body.