The work of Museo Amparo’s staff, usually invisible in the galleries, now lines the walls. Hierarchies are subverted: works from the Museum’s collection that have never been shown sit alongside its most familiar pieces. Images printed on transparent silk blend into the space that surrounds them, moving with the air of our breath.
When you pull a net from a river, you rarely catch one thing alone. Here, looking means noticing messy connections. To treasure the entire entanglement is to redistribute attention. Fabric, the main medium of this exhibition, embodies this idea: threads collaborate to form a woven surface, no matter how different they are from one another.
The exhibition invites visitors to consider the museum itself as a living network, shaped by countless gestures, decisions and forms of care. By bringing together overlooked works, hidden labour and delicate material interventions, it proposes a broader understanding of cultural heritage—one that values relationships as much as individual objects and reveals how meaning emerges through connection rather than isolation.












