Triana Gamarra is an Uruguayan ceramist currently living and working in Berlin, Germany.
She finds inspiration in society, culture and philosophy. She likes to questioning the world around her as well as the stories that we are told, and doing the job that philosophy does of finding questions which no one wants to ask.
Her latest work Fémina, exhibited at the Florence Contemporary Gallery, questions the concept of women, “¿What is to be a woman today?” We believe and live by a concept created by society that tells us what is to be a woman or a man, beyond biology. What are the common experiences that make us identify as such, beyond biology? We’re living at a breaking point in history where for us to coexist in peace we should erase all labels and the preconceptions around them to finally be who we are, humans.