I like to keep these conversations very free flowing — I hope that's ok. I have some different questions in mind and I'd love to hear about some of the points you may haven't had a chance to speak about yet ... But first I'd just love to hear about you, your life in general. You're from Spain originally, right?
Yes, I was born in Spain. I came to New York for love, in 2010. I met a Hawaiian woman — she was a singer for Hercules and Love Affair.
Oh my god, yeah! I love them.
She was one of the first producers of the band. I met her in Barcelona, and we fell in love and I moved here. And we're still very good friends. We're separated, but we're still married. So that's what brought me to New York: love.
I always love hearing people's New York origin story. These stories seem just as important as the story of their work, their creative work.
I've been reading about your work and thinking a lot about this idea of collage — not only like in terms of 2D collage, but also assemblage, with these kinds of artifacts. Could tell me a little bit more about your journey to working in this manner: assembling artifacts of culture in a space to create a presentation or an installation. Is that how you've always worked?
Yeah. Being mostly a drawing artist for many years, part of my process is collecting things. So the way I work in a drawing is also collage, but at some point, I was like, "I need more 3D expression."
Collecting is such an obsessive process for me. [I was thinking] like, "Okay, this is all my history. This is the way I've been obsessively putting together everything that created my identity as an artist and also as a person and also as a queer artist."
So I felt like collage should be my new media because it's richer for me. My creative process shifted to something more collaged because I felt it was the language that I wanted to be using ... the language that I feel more comfortable working with right now.