In the midst of a process of searching for a visual vocabulary that arises from the experience with nature, the artist Lina Espinosa starts from intuitive strokes seeking to connect with situations of daily life. Anicca It comes from Pali, an Indian dialect, and means transience and impermanence. The pieces in the exhibition explore the colors that permeate existence, the sounds that accompany daily life, and the feelings they evoke. They are a translation of sensory experiences that inspire the pieces, creating a unique language with gestural and organic strokes. From the experience of the "now," the artist creates from the rhythms she discovers in her surroundings to express the subtle and permanent changes of beings and things. Some of these compositions are a profound exploration of being and the present; others arise from studies of musical variations, translating rhythm through gesture and color contrast.