Selva Aparicio unveils three major installations at Gallery Wendi Norris
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Selva Aparicio unveils three major installations at Gallery Wendi Norris
Installation view, "Selva Aparicio: What Remains." Photo by Glen Cheriton. Courtesy of the artist and Gallery Wendi Norris, San Francisco.



SAN FRANCISCO, CA.- Gallery Wendi Norris presents three installations by interdisciplinary artist Selva Aparicio (b. 1987, Barcelona). Known for her poignant and unexpected transfiguration of organic, often delicate and overlooked materials, Aparicio creates works that serve as profound meditations on memory, grief, resistance, and renewal. Exploring the boundaries between mourning and materiality, intimacy and decay, her debut exhibition at Gallery Wendi Norris features spatial interventions that embody the rigor, laboriousness, and painstaking precision of her physical process, as well as the quiet, emotional power at the heart of her deeply personal practice.

“I see these works together as forming an architecture of both mourning and resistance,” says Aparicio. “I work with what is fragile and neglected because fragility is honest. These materials—discarded cemetery flowers, cicada wings, human hair, a rug—are witnesses. They carry stories within themselves and remind us that beauty cannot be possessed, only respected.”

Spanning the gallery’s arched window is Aparicio’s newest work, Leaves of Three, Let Me Be (2025), a reimagining of Frank Lloyd Wright’s striking Tree of Life stained-glass design. Embedding dried flowers collected from cemeteries between plexiglass and meticulously pieced into a stained-glass armature, Aparicio both honors and disrupts the tradition of sacred windows. By merging delicate materials within a framework of endurance, set aglow with the ephemerality of natural light, this work aims to sanctify that which is discarded, forgotten, and left on the margins.

Velo de Luto (2020)—“mourning veil” in Spanish—is a wall-mounted installation composed of the wings of 17-year cicadas sewn with the hair of three generations of women in Aparicio’s family. Subverting the garment’s historical association as a marker of women’s submission and blind faith within patriarchal structures, this piece harnesses the cicada’s long cycle of dormancy and brief, yet dramatic, eruption into life as a symbol of transformation, rebirth, and continuity. Weaving remnants of her female ancestors into this work, Aparicio reclaims the traditional implications of the mourning veil.

Aparicio installed a large-scale “rug” carved directly into wood flooring. Through its elaborately crafted details, from tassels strewn in different directions to its ornate patterning, this piece, Childhood Memories (2024), initially gives the viewer the appearance of textile fabric. By producing through the act of physical scarring and rendering the rug immobile—fixed in place, quietly bearing witness, exposing rather than concealing—this work insists on beauty’s ability to flourish even in the midst of trauma.










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Selva Aparicio unveils three major installations at Gallery Wendi Norris




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