16x30 La Fila Del Banco - El Borracho Y Su Casa... Apr 2026

In the end, the drunkard’s house is also the bank’s waiting room. The line never ends. And the 16x30 frame, like a coffin or a counter, holds them both.

The composition is claustrophobic, almost square, but the title insists on the possessive: his house. This is the cruelest irony. The drunkard owns nothing in it. The television is a rental (a red sticker confirms it). The refrigerator hums empty. Yet the artist paints his posture with a strange dignity: spine curved but not broken, hand wrapped around the bottle like a scepter. The house is not a home; it is a container for repetition. The same empty bottles line the windowsill in ascending order—a drunkard’s abacus counting days that no longer differ. 16x30 La fila del banco - El borracho y su casa...

The final work reverses the gaze. Where 16x30 trapped us inside a public institution, and La fila del banco erased the institution entirely, El borracho y su casa offers a domestic interior—but one so disordered it resembles a public ruin. The drunkard sits on a mattress on the floor, a bottle between his legs. Behind him, a wall displays a calendar from three years ago, still open to October. A single chair holds a pile of unopened envelopes (late notices, eviction threats). The “house” is a single room: kitchenette, bed, door, window looking onto an identical brick wall. In the end, the drunkard’s house is also

Together, these three works form a devastating sequence. 16x30 shows the spatial discipline of capitalism: long, low, horizontal, impossible to escape. La fila del banco shows the temporal discipline: endless, circular, anonymous. El borracho y su casa shows the domestic consequence: a private space colonized by public failure, where the only remaining ritual is drinking. The composition is claustrophobic, almost square, but the

Human figures appear as vertical interruptions in this horizontal anxiety. Three individuals wait in line, their backs to us. Posture communicates everything: the first shifts weight from foot to foot, the second checks an empty wallet, the third stares at a number dispenser that will never call theirs. The 16x30 format denies them a horizon. There is no sky here, only the fluorescent ceiling and the marble floor. The painting’s geometry becomes a metaphor for financial entrapment—a life measured not in years but in loan applications and overdraft fees.