
Micromosaic
Smaller formats built with tiny glass and porcelain tesserae, with attention to rhythm, cutting and detail.
From micromosaic to macromosaic, the work moves between small glass and porcelain tesserae, murals, portraiture and the human figure.

Smaller formats built with tiny glass and porcelain tesserae, with attention to rhythm, cutting and detail.

A body of work oriented toward scale, circulation and public presence. The mural appears as a collective and territorial language.

Javier openly names portraiture and the human figure as a lasting preference. It is one of the strongest and most demanding grounds in his practice, appearing in portraits of Anita Valeria Paredes Guerrero with Pombocha, of his parents, of his mother embracing his sister, and in a work about Palestinian children in Gaza.

The learning process was self-taught. Teaching emerges from that same practical construction and from an ongoing willingness to improve the technique.