
Eva Lootz is a trailblazing artist known for using natural and industrial materials to explore physical, sensory, and symbolic processes. Everything is connected: art, language, body, ecology and science. Her artwork does not provide clear-cut interpretations. In fact, it encourages viewers to find their own meanings in unexpected, fragmented and unspoken elements, challenging traditional forms of knowledge.
In Lo tengo en la punta de la lengua (It’s on the tip of my tongue), Eva Lootz explores the limits of language, examining what cannot be named, what is forgotten or trapped between the body and words. The exhibition transforms the space into a sensory realm. Voices, whispers, sounds, everyday objects and materials such as lime, tin, wool and felt are related to organs, prostheses and gestures to release language from its representative function.
The works evoke voids, interruptions and fractures of knowledge in a world saturated with information, giving shape to the unspeakable, the excluded and the incomprehensible. Noteworthy pieces include Lengua de cal (Lime Tongue) and Que cada dolor diga su nombre (Let Every Pain Speak Its Name), made with Majorcan lime, a material steeped in historical and symbolic memory that, as it cracks and is pierced by words, connects body, matter and language.
The exhibition therefore offers a poetic and critical experience where meaning is not given, but emerges from fragility, instability and the unexpected, opening up new ways of thinking about knowledge, art and reality.