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A mirror-cube bears a single raven's feather—the lightest possible tenant—while metallic letters spell the ancient epitaph. The mirror returns the world to itself: sky, passerby, ground, all briefly belonging to the cube. The phrase pivots on levis: not only “light in weight,” but “gentle, soft.” Here, the earth is not a burden; it is a caress. The feather tilts the sentence from gravity to grace, from tomb to threshold. In our reflection the wish… becomes reciprocal: may the world rest lightly on you, and may you learn the art of levity—the tender lift that allows memory to be carried without crushing what remembers.
Jorge Canete, trained as an interior architect, merges architecture with visual and conceptual art, composing with materials such as moss, lichen, feather, stone, and glass. He employs minimalist, site-specific techniques that use emptiness, light, and simple participatory acts to invite viewers into transformative environments. His poetic installations evoke sacredness and invite introspection, offering spaces where visitors can let go, reflect, and experience destiny as an open, evolving path.