Liminalgia
Derived from liminality and nostalgia, Liminalgia is a series of paintings depicting empty everyday spaces and functional environments that typically buzz with movement. These are transitional spaces, devoid of apparent charm, that usually go unnoticed. The absence of human figures suspends the habitual function of these places, transforming them into silent and tension-filled stages. Here, the emptiness suggests a latentpresence, as if something has recently occurred or is just about to happen. This apparent stillness grants their impersonal character a paradoxically intimate quality. The viewer becomes a solitary witness, almost an intruder, before scenes that elevate the mundane and reveal the emotional weight underlying the spaces we inhabit only in passing. Liminalgia evokes a nostalgia without a clear origin: the sensation of being in a familiar place that, nevertheless, feels strange or distant.