Abstract: One to One / Bellas Artes is a photographic exploration of the Palacio de Bellas Artes in Mexico City, focusing on fragments from its two distinct periods of construction. Originally designed in the early 1900s by Italian architect Adamo Boari in the art nouveau style and completed in 1934 by Mexican architect Nicolás Mariscal in an art deco style, the building embodies Mexico's complex journey from dictatorship through revolution to modern nationhood. This project reimagines the Palace not as a monolith but as a living entity composed of cracks, dust, materials, and design elements sourced globally. By isolating architectural fragments and reproducing them at a 1:1 scale, Lake Verea invites viewers into an intimate, slowed-down encounter with the monument—one that questions provenance, perception, scale, and historical context. Lake Verea act as conceptual archaeologists, tracing the provenance of materials and the inspiration behind the designs. Through close-up imagery and poetic interpretation, One to One reveals the tension between monumentality and fragility, offering a new visual and emotional reading of a national symbol. This body of work resists linear history, proposing instead a crosscutting notion of time and space through the silent language of form, surface, and memory.
Lake Verea (Sun,) studied this question.
Synapse has enriched 5 closely related papers on similar clinical questions. Consider them for comparative context: