2010. Sea Planet unfolds in a territory where the sea and the surface that contains it seem to question each other. Forms appear only to dissolve again, as if the landscape were on the verge of becoming something else. The solid and the fluid exchange roles, creating an unstable space in which perception finds no fixed point. The project explores that moment when the world seems to reconfigure itself under the gaze, when the scene turns ambiguous and it becomes unclear whether we are witnessing an origin, a disappearance, or something that never quite defines itself. Sea Planet proposes a reading of the landscape as living matter: shifting, mutable, and always in tension between what it reveals and what it withholds. A place where boundaries dissolve and reality seems to emerge and retreat in the same gesture.