
Ignacio Alvaro's "PORTAL I & II" is a two-panel work spanning 230 × 180 cm, each canvas built from stitched fabric, ceramic shard, and layered acrylic pigment around a narrow channel of embedded LED. The two panels face one another rather than sitting side by side in a single plane, their light channels aligned so each becomes the other's threshold. At this scale, the accumulated fragments read as architecture as much as surface.
The diptych format lets Alvaro treat passage literally — one panel as departure, the other as arrival — while keeping both grounded in the same vocabulary of broken vessel and torn cloth that runs through his practice. The embedded light does not illuminate the work so much as mark the point where one surface ends and the crossing begins. Sewn seams stay visible throughout, memory kept rather than concealed.
For collectors, "PORTAL I & II" represents Alvaro's most ambitious use of scale and light to date — a monumental diptych that asks to be read as a single passage rather than two separate works, with room to anchor a significant collection.