Tlaloc, Aztec god of rain and springs, embodies the vital and ambivalent force of freshwater — life-giving yet destructive. His gaze warns us: without respect for water, there is no future. He speaks for dried rivers, broken mountains, and the storms to come.
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TLALOC

Mesoamerican god of rain and springs, Tlaloc embodies the power of freshwater, the kind that nourishes the land before flowing to the ocean.

In this painting, his face seems to emerge from geological memory, halfway between rock and wave. He represents the vital and ambivalent force of water, capable of both nurturing and destroying.
His gaze is a warning. As guardian of natural cycles, he reminds us that without respect for water, there can be no harvest — and no future.

Tlaloc is not a forgotten myth: he is the cry of dried-up rivers, erratic rains, and wounded mountains. A call to protect what remains.


Collection Océano – For the Oceans to Breathe Again”

A visual tribute to the beauty, richness, and fragility of the seas: a call to awareness and action to protect the oceans, an essential condition for their survival, and therefore for that of humanity.

Mythical gods embody our contradictions, our attachments, our hopes. Their faces are the symbolic guardians of a marine world in peril.

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