Rodrigo Arce -
"People ask me if I am angry that the work destroys itself," he says, pulling on his coat to leave. "No. The work is the destruction. The only crime would be pretending it isn't happening."
In a sun-drenched but crumbling warehouse in the Villa Crespo neighborhood of Buenos Aires, there is no heat. Yet, the man standing in the center of the room, wearing a thick wool coat and fingerless gloves, is trying to melt ice.
As the internet churned, the walls vibrated. Slowly, over two months, the dust of the Renaissance fell to the floor. The past was literally shaken apart by the hum of the present.
"The internet tells us it is weightless," Arce argues. "But data has mass. Data has heat. Data destroys architecture just as surely as a flood." Today, Arce lives between a small studio in Berlin’s Wedding district and a converted grain silo outside La Plata. He refuses to own a smartphone. His assistant prints out emails and hands them to him on paper. When I ask him about the contradiction—making art about digital residue while avoiding screens—he laughs, a rare, dry sound. rodrigo arce
Rodrigo Arce (b. 1982, La Plata) does not look like a disruptor. With his quiet demeanor and the precise, slow movements of a watchmaker, he appears more like a librarian of lost things. But over the last decade, Arce has quietly become one of South America’s most compelling voices in post-conceptual art, a poet of entropy who works not with paint or marble, but with humidity, shadow, and the anxious geometry of the modern city.
"I need to feel the weight of a message," he says. "If you send me an email, I have to hold the paper. I have to feel if you typed it in anger or in haste. Digital life flattens texture. My job is to put the texture back."
And gravity, as Arce knows, always wins in the end. "People ask me if I am angry that
"You learn very quickly that solidity is a lie," he says. "The walls we build to protect ourselves are the first things to crush us." In 2023, Arce took a sharp left turn into digital media—with a Luddite twist. For the Venice Biennale collateral event, he presented "The Cloud is a Leaky Pipe." He built a server room inside a 16th-century palazzo. The servers ran a live feed of global Wikipedia edits. But instead of displaying the data on screens, Arce routed the electrical impulses from the server fans into a series of pneumatic drills attached to the palazzo’s ancient plaster walls.
He is currently at work on a new project, tentatively titled "The Audience of Dust." For one year, he will not make any objects at all. Instead, he will visit a different museum each week and measure the thickness of dust on the frames of the most famous paintings in the collection. At the end of the year, he will publish a ledger: "Rembrandt: 0.04mm of neglect. Rothko: 0.12mm of awe. Monet: 0.00mm (cleaned by intern, August 14)."
He did not photograph the cracks. Instead, he returned to the studio and wove them. Using black cotton thread on white linen, Arce created massive topographies of anxiety. At a distance, they look like minimalist grids; up close, they vibrate with the organic terror of a pending earthquake. The only crime would be pretending it isn't happening
"I am interested in the residue of bodies," Arce says. "Not the heroic gesture, but the sigh. The heat from the back of a knee. The condensation from a nervous palm."
By J.S. Mercier Berlin / Buenos Aires —


