Pulp studio
colher espeto
The discomfort food kit
What if eating for vanity and status is, in the end, something most people can’t even access?
Those who do eat believe they’re being nourished, but it’s really just a food-like mix — a mash-up of organic stuff thrown together in an aesthetic frenzy with intense flavors.
Is your body really being fed, or is it just your brain, for a brief moment, building the illusion of being satisfied?
Those who don’t eat picture food in its rawest form. They don’t have the strength to imagine fancy recipes or visually curated meals. It’s just potatoes, rice, flour, and water.
Hunger reminds us of its roots — it forces us, against our will, to face the reality of food.
Food isn’t for everyone, and it doesn’t belong to everyone.
The spoon that holds nothing
The knife that cuts nothing
The napkin that’s already dirty
These pieces were made from all sorts of leftover materials — stuff found on the street or washed up on beaches — all chosen specifically for a table that questions the true meaning of hunger.
Dimensions: 18,2 cm x 3,6 cm
Materials: bone (animal unknown), metal sheet, brass wire
Technique: cut metal sheet with wire soldering; bone attached with a rivet