NEWS ++ All Too Human - The Ammerman Center 18th Triennial on Arts & Technology. March 26th - 28th, 2026 || Restoration/Regeneration - New Media Caucus Symposium. March 6th - 8th, 2026 || ARTECH 2025 - Media Art Cultures, Communities & Territories 12th International Conference on Digital and Interactive Arts. November 26th - 28th, 2025 ++
Selected Work
What the Salt Crystals Knew
Noise Without Landscape
Huemul Series
La Isla de Vidrio
The End of the Sun
Campo del Cielo
I Wish
Cartography of a Snowfall
Two Storms
Se Habla Español
Golden Hour
Fly Morgue
90° South
The Origin of Clouds
100° Celsius
Aurora
Multitud
Sobreviviente
Universal
Campo del Cielo
Meteorite fragment from Campo del Cielo, custom electronics, steel enclosure, 30'' x 28'' x 20 ''
University Gallery, Mahoney Hall. UMASS, Lowell, MA.
Approximately four thousand years ago, a 200-ton asteroid entered Earth’s atmosphere and fragmented upon impact in what is now Northern Argentina. The region was named Pingüen N’onaxa in the Guaycurú language, later translated into Spanish as Campo del Cielo (Field of the Sky). The meteorite originates from the asteroid belt located between the orbits of Mars and Jupiter, formed approximately 4.5 billion years ago during the early formation of the solar system.
In the installation, a fragment from Campo del Cielo rotates continuously on its own axis within a steel enclosure. Viewed through a small peephole, the meteorite generates fleeting sparks of fire, revealing both its material presence and its cosmic origin.
Hace aproximadamente 4000 años, un asteroide de 200 toneladas chocó con la atmósfera terrestre y sus fragmentos cayeron en lo que hoy es la provincia de Santiago del Estero en el norte argentino. Los pobladores originarios llamaban al aera Pingüen N’onaxa, que se traduce como Campo del Cielo. El meteorito era parte del cinturón de asteroides ubicado entre las órbitas de Marte y Júpiter, su origen coincide con la formación del sistema solar hace 4.5 billones de años. En la instalación, un fragemento del meteorito de Campo del Cielo rota continuamenmte en su propio eje liberando chispazos y destellos de luz.