Tom Carr’s work, as the artist himself defines it, “aims to emphasise the importance of the spectator as an element that actively perceives and, with his will to see, constructs. The eye is mine, its line, although simple, belongs to my anatomy and symbolises my particular gaze, creation, my way of approaching life”. The gallery’s exhibition shows a journey through Tom Carr’s career, which, throughout its evolution, has been configuring a direct relationship with the form, a work of synthesis with the minimum elements and from the central point of the form, managing to establish a direct dialogue with the energy generated. Tom Carr, born in Tarragona in 1956, teaches at the Escola Massana in Barcelona and has taught at the School of Visual Arts in New York, among other centres. Tom Carr’s work indicates the artist’s willingness to expand his oeuvre through different waves that make it possible to understand his evolution and provide different visions of the sculptural work. His work is generated from a centre that becomes a spiral that grows on itself and transforms into a helix to become fixed in the shape of a pyramid. “The projected light – in this case on large surfaces – transforms the physical characteristics of the place where the spectator is situated and plays with his perception. It is not a question of constructing inhabitable or uninhabitable spaces, as for example Bruce Nauman does on the basis of the psychological perception of light and colour; Carr makes a more scenographic use of lighting, the light bathes the walls of the room, as if it were part of the environment, so that the walls, ceiling or floor are transformed into unexpected elements,” describes Fina Duran. Light, movement, colour are some of the other creative waves that have emerged from Tom Carr’s work.