Rodrigo Arce ❲2026 Release❳
His latest piece, "The Distance Between a Sigh and a Screen" (currently on view at Galería Ruth Benzacar), is a perfect introduction to his obsession. It is a single, massive sheet of handmade Japanese paper, suspended two inches from the gallery wall. Behind it, hidden from view, is a grid of ultrasonic humidifiers. Over the course of the exhibition, the paper absorbs the mist, sags, buckles, and begins to tear. By the final day, the paper lies in a wet pulp on the floor, leaving only a faint, ghostly watermark on the white wall.
Critic Helena Marks of Artforum called the series "a terrifying meditation on the fallacy of modernity," noting that Arce "stitches a scream into a pillow." Arce’s materials are his manifesto. He refuses permanence. In "Archive of the Second Before Sleep" (2021), he covered the floor of the Museo de Arte Moderno de Bogotá with 10,000 sheets of thermal receipt paper. Each sheet was blank. As visitors walked across the installation, their body heat turned the thermal paper black, recording the ghost paths of their footsteps. Within three days, the entire floor was solid black—an abstract expressionist painting created by total absence. rodrigo arce
"When we live in a city, we pretend the ground is stable," Arce explains, sipping over-brewed mate tea. "But the earth doesn't care about our sidewalks. I am trying to make the invisible violence of infrastructure visible." His latest piece, "The Distance Between a Sigh
He did not photograph the cracks. Instead, he returned to the studio and wove them. Using black cotton thread on white linen, Arce created massive topographies of anxiety. At a distance, they look like minimalist grids; up close, they vibrate with the organic terror of a pending earthquake. Over the course of the exhibition, the paper
It is absurd. It is meticulous. It is quintessential Arce. As the interview ends, the humidifiers in the gallery next door switch off. The paper on the wall has begun to droop. In three days, it will fall. Arce watches it for a long moment, not with sadness, but with the clinical curiosity of a doctor observing a patient expire.
"You learn very quickly that solidity is a lie," he says. "The walls we build to protect ourselves are the first things to crush us." In 2023, Arce took a sharp left turn into digital media—with a Luddite twist. For the Venice Biennale collateral event, he presented "The Cloud is a Leaky Pipe." He built a server room inside a 16th-century palazzo. The servers ran a live feed of global Wikipedia edits. But instead of displaying the data on screens, Arce routed the electrical impulses from the server fans into a series of pneumatic drills attached to the palazzo’s ancient plaster walls.