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Anatomy of Flight is a sculpture that explores humanity's desire to conquer the air through engineering and intuition. The work evokes a mechanical ornithopter: a hybrid creature between machine and bird, constructed from industrial metal, gears, and articulated structures that suggest movement, balance, and tension.
The broad, ribbed wings recall the anatomy of early, nature-inspired flight attempts, while the exposed mechanical core reveals gears… and mechanisms reminiscent of the pre-industrial era and steampunk imagery. The rusted finish and irregular surfaces reinforce the feeling of an object rescued from time, like a forgotten artifact that once took flight but never touched down again.
The sculpture is presented as a reflection on the boundary between technical ambition and poetic impulse: it is not a functional machine, but the idea of flight transformed into matter.
Adriel Rodríguez Echazabal is a Cuban sculptor, trained at the Matanzas Professional School of Visual Arts, who works primarily with recycled metal and machine parts. His sculptures combine the mechanical and the organic, evoking steampunk aesthetics and exploring welding techniques as a form of “drawing” in space. Through his art, he conveys the power of transformation, the capacity to rediscover beauty and dignity in the discarded, and awakens in the viewer a profound reflection on the constant possibility of renewal and creative freedom.