Everyone wants a wreath on their door as decoration, but no one wants weeds in their garden. Under the
theme of duality, I chose to create this Land Art piece. I gathered the weeds directly from the site.
Through the circle, we discover an accumulation of plants, a heap I collected while cleaning the
ground. The wreath is vibrant and luminous, while on the ground the pile of vegetation appears dark.
Yet, when seen differently, it is the heap that begins to come alive through the microorganisms that
inhabit it, while the wreath slowly takes its last breath.
This world in our hands.
The installation explores the boundary between order and chaos. A large wreath of flowers, plants, and
organic matter symbolizes balance and respect for life. It evokes the human gesture that creates,
nurtures, and celebrates nature. Through this circle, the gaze turns to another scene: the same
materials, but left in disorder, mixed with debris and traces of neglect. The wreath becomes a
passage, a fragile boundary between two possible states of the same world. It invites us to reflect on
our role as observers and actors, to care for what surrounds us or to let it decay.