Spanish street art duo PichiAvo created a large-scale installation titled 'Per ofrenar' for the Fallas de Valencia festival. This piece took on the form of an Ionic temple, inspired by the Temple of Athena Nike in Athens, and was on view until March 19th at Borrull Street 31 in central Valencia. The piece was burned down with the closing of the festival.
The 'Per ofrenar' monument was constructed using traditional fallas techniques and materials, primarily wood and paper, by artisan Paco Ribes. PichiAvo's large-scale installation featured an interior altar built from surplus paper from the printing of the duo's book, Our Odyssey. This composition propped up a perfectly balanced scale flanked by two wax candles representing Classical Art and Graffiti.
Monument-Inspired Large-Scale Installations
PichiAvo Builds the 'Per Ofrenar' Installation
Trend Themes
1. Ephemeral Monumental Art - A growing appetite for large-scale, intentionally transient monuments creates opportunities for temporary public works to redefine civic memory and audience engagement models.
2. Hybrid Classical-street Aesthetics - By fusing Greco-Roman motifs with graffiti language, this aesthetic blend opens paths for crossover cultural products that challenge institutional art hierarchies and collector markets.
3. Upcycled Printed-material Installations - The reuse of surplus book paper and print waste in sculptural form signals potential for circular-design art practices that substitute traditional materials and cost structures.
Industry Implications
1. Festival Arts and Events - Large-scale, burnable installations shift festival programming economics and sponsorship models toward impermanent spectacle and experience-first monetization.
2. Cultural Heritage Conservation - Works that mimic classical monuments while embracing ephemerality prompt reevaluation of preservation priorities and the role of digital archiving in heritage stewardship.
3. Sustainable Materials Manufacturing - Demand for structurally sound, low-cost, compostable materials for temporary art suggests market openings for engineered paper composites and biodegradable adhesives.