Impossible Vision: Mariano Ullua’s Sculptural Drawings That Rewrite Space
December 11, 2025 | nadiaevangelinaFrom the opening moments of the exhibition, “Visión imposible” (Impossible Vision) at Recoleta Cultural Center reveals itself as less a conventional “show” and more a deliberate reimagining of materials and space: a sculptural installation that dissolves the boundary between drawing and three-dimensional form. Ullua uses mild steel — a humble, industrial metal — as if it were pencil or charcoal, lifting lines off a page and suspending them in air. The result is simultaneously minimal and daring: delicate arcs, loops, and tangles that hover, bend and hover again, tracing volatile geometries in the gallery’s volume.
| Recoleta Cultural Center |
What makes this transformation especially powerful is Ullua’s willingness to embrace color. In “Visión imposible”, the metal is not only shaped; it is painted, coated, gifted with hues that introduce new perceptual tensions. The interplay of line, volume, and color destabilizes the viewer’s assumptions: a “drawing” that occupies space, a “sculpture” that feels graphic. The gallery becomes a field of floating gestures, where shadows and reflections participate, and where negative space becomes as charged as the material itself.
Beneath the formal experimentation lies, however, a quiet wit and a sense of modesty, traits characteristic of Ullua’s broader practice. The exhibition does not seek grandeur, but intimacy. The metal lines do not attempt to dominate; they insinuate, invite, challenge quietly. It is a humble poetry of form, born from discarded or industrial materials repurposed into delicate structures.
Curated by Carla Barbero, the show feels like a thoughtful continuation and refinement of Ullua’s ongoing investigation into the poetic potential of industrial material, line, humor, and space. It neither flaunts technical virtuosity nor shock value; instead, it invites reflection, subtle disorientation, and a renewed awareness of how a simple “line” can occupy and transform the world around us.
For those accustomed to heavy, monumental contemporary sculpture, “Visión imposible” might feel almost ghostly: thin, airy, fragile. Yet that is precisely its strength. There is an elegance in its restraint, a radicalism in sparseness. It’s an exhibition that doesn’t shout, it whispers. And in its whispers, it manages to rewire the space of the gallery, and briefly, rewire how we see.
"Carroña Última Forma"
Location: Recoleta Cultural Center, Junín 1930, C1113 CABA, Buenos Aires (Argentina)
Opening Date: 13th November 2025
End Date: 2026
Working hours: Tuesday-Friday: 1.30pm to 10pm
Saturday-Sunday: 11.15am to 10pm
Official website:
Artist:
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