Eudald has been a source of inspiration for me since around 2011.
When I draw, I enjoy building form—but I also like breaking it apart. It might sound strange, but there’s something powerful about letting chaos into the process. It creates a situation I have to react to, one that wouldn’t have come up if I’d stayed in control the whole time. These moments force decisions that feel very alive and unpredictable. Exciting.
That’s what I see in Eudald’s work. Realism, yes, but with something volatile running through it. A mix of precision and destruction. My wife often compares it to the figure of Shiva Nataraja—the god who creates through the act of destroying. That’s always stayed with me.
One of the 1000 things we talk about is the plan for Don't Create Alone 2025. A very different kind of workshop, and we’re hosting it in Catalonia this September.