Álvaro Urbano pauses metal factory for brief moment of decay — Huge


Anyone who has ever decried the seasonal phenomenon we call fall knows how quickly nature can transition from verdant greenery to bare branches. The same goes for missed waterings for neglected houseplants: Skip a week and witness the edges brown and curl into a crisp. Once these natural changes occur, so do their remedies or failures, and it doesn’t take long before we’re discovering new shoots or depositing evidence of our neglect in our compost bins.

For Álvaro Urbano, the brief period between boom and bust is worth preserving. He sculpts common plants from metal, casting fragile life forms into solid materials and rendering their colors and textures with paint. It’s the act of “making small monuments out of things that normally disappear or change in a matter of days or minutes,” the artist said.

Detailed image of a branch with leaves and small white flowers by Alvaro Urbano
“TABLEAU VIVANT” (2024), metal and paint, 175 x 125 x 88 cm. Photography: Marjorie Brunet Plaza, courtesy the artist and Marian Goodman Gallery

Drawing from theater and architecture, Urbano is interested not only in creating independent works but also in creating immersive scenes. His sculptures often leave traces of leaves on the floor or appear to grow directly from the bare gallery walls, their knotted branches reaching into the space. “Viewers can enter these scenes as if they were witnesses to a scene that has already begun,” the artist added.

Urbano lives and works between Paris and Berlin, and has exhibited the latter’s work in the Spore Initiative. Find more information on Instagram.

Red rose sculpture by Alvaro Urbano in white corner
Installation view of “Alvaro Urbano: Granada Granada” (2023), Travesí a Cuatro, Mexico City. Photography: Ramiro Chaves, courtesy of the artist and Travesí a Cuatro
Two large suspended leaf sculptures by Alvaro Urbano appear to be dying, turning brown and yellow. Both hang upside down on the wall
“Hotel Gazmira (Musa acuminata)” (2025), metal and paint, 200 x 35 x 37 cm. Photography: Marjorie Brunet Plaza, courtesy of the artist
Detailed image of a metal leaf that appears to be dying and turning brown and yellow by Alvaro Urbano
Detail of ‘Gazmila Hotel (Musa acuminata)’ (2025)
Sculpture of potted plants with yellowing leaves, two of which have fallen to the floor, by Alvaro Urbano
“Inés” (2025), metal and paint, 50 x 35 x 125 cm. Photography: Marjorie Brunet Plaza, courtesy of the artist
Monstera deliciosa sculpture by Alvaro Urbano in white corner
Installation view of “Alvaro Urbano: Granada Granada” (2023), Travesí a Cuatro, Mexico City. Photography: Ramiro Chaves, courtesy of the artist and Travesí a Cuatro
Monstera deliciosa sculpture by Alvaro Urbano in white corner
Installation view of “Alvaro Urbano: Granada Granada” (2023), Travesí a Cuatro, Mexico City. Photography: Ramiro Chaves, courtesy of the artist and Travesí a Cuatro


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