Otero Fuentes


Team



Otero Fuentes sculpts material into potential, shaping glimpses of a reality where form and function converge into an extraordinary concept that can be felt, reimagined, and fully experienced. As both sculptor and architect, he transforms potential into beauty, crafting each piece with precision and purpose. His work is a testament to artistry—where the poetics of craft emerge through structure, movement, and vision, seamlessly becoming one.

Born in Puerto Rico, Miguel is a migrant to the USA and a university-trained architect licensed in New York and Florida, currently working at Front. As a sculptor, his practice bridges the pragmatism, aesthetics, and harmonics of architecture with the transcendental—a metaphysical thread woven through sculpture. His work evokes feelings beyond the tangible, expressing things we cannot hold but can feel. Through his sculptures, an ongoing exploration unfolds, where the cosmologies of perception reveal patterns and cycles, interrupted through thought and the creative act. Gaps, ridges, fleeting shadows of being, and the spirit of form converge, shaping a dimension of intentionality where materiality and meaning merge into a profound artistic language meant not to be dissolved by discourse, but to be contemplated and lived.

Alitza Cardona-Collazo is a Puerto Rican painter, anthropologist-historian, architectural designer, and museum professional. She is currently a PhD candidate in Sustainable Heritage at University College London. Her academic research examines how meaning is produced at the intersection of creativity, culture, urban sustainability, disaster, and conflict. Through a blend of creative practice and philosophical inquiry, she explores how transformations in the built environment shape cultural memory and collective identity.

In collaboration with Otero Fuentes, Cardona-Collazo expands the delivery of the artistic experience to public audiences through a synthesis of material expression, production development, programming, and curatorial work. Together, they extend the studio’s creative vision into innovative forms that integrate culture and technology with academic sophistication, while grounding their practice in the observation of lived social realities, embracing difference as a generative force for cultural production and critical engagement.