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GARASTOR Gallery
La Forma-di-Vita

Bare Life, Potentiality, and the Irrevocable:
The Floor as the Negative of Life

Life is form, the floor is its vessel — every plank of oak is an inscription of a form-of-life. In the fissure between potentiality and actuality, the wood remembers the echo of every footstep. As Agamben declared: form-of-life is indivisible, it never separates from its own possibility. The floor, too — within each grain is sealed the potentiality of a tree and the form it ultimately became.

Via Recta

“The straight grain does not ask to be understood. It simply runs — from root to crown, from birth to silence — like a prayer that has forgotten its words but remembers its direction.”

Via Recta · Strip Plank

The oak remembers the sun it grew toward. Every plank is a vector of light, frozen in wood.

Scala Paradisi

“Every fold is a negation that affirms. The chevron breaks the line not to destroy it — but to lift it. A geometry of ascent in which each angle whispers: there is more.”

Pseudo-Dionysius, The Celestial Hierarchy — Scala Paradisi

You do not walk upon a chevron floor. You rise through it — each step a rung, each seam a threshold between the visible and the invisible.

Opus Dei

“The weave is older than language. Before the first word, there was the interlacing of branches, the braid of roots beneath the soil. The herringbone floor is not decoration — it is memory made visible. A loom upon which the house breathes.”

Thomas Aquinas, Summa Theologica — Opus Dei

To walk upon woven oak is to participate in the oldest act of creation: the binding of one thing to another.

The Tree Remembers

“A floor is not dead wood. It is a forest that learned to lie down without forgetting how to stand. The rings still count the seasons. The grain still holds the rain of a hundred winters. You are not walking on a surface — you are walking through time.”

GARASTOR — Naturphilosophie

Schelling wrote that nature is visible spirit. GARASTOR believes the floor is nature made intimate — the wilderness brought indoors, tamed not by force but by reverence.

The Body and the Floor

“The foot knows what the eye cannot see. Before architecture, before the wall, before the roof — there was the ground. And the body, bare, meeting it. The floor is the first architecture: the plane upon which life unfolds, the surface that receives every fall, every first step, every final stillness.”

Merleau-Ponty, Phenomenology of Perception

The floor is not a thing we look at. It is a thing we live with — the silent witness of every intimacy, every solitude, every dance in the dark.

Three Collections

Via Recta · The Straight Path

Strip Plank

Augustine knew: the soul moves in a line. It does not wander — it is drawn. Each plank is a fragment of that drawing, a vector toward light. Nine islands, nine ways of being straight.

Budelli
BudelliIsola di Budelli
Burano
BuranoIsola di Burano
Capri
CapriIsola di Capri
Elba
ElbaIsola d'Elba
Levanzo
LevanzoIsola di Levanzo
Ischia
IschiaIsola d'Ischia
Murano
MuranoIsola di Murano
Palmarola
PalmarolaIsola di Palmarola
Sicily
SicilyIsola di Sicilia
Between Forms

“Between the straight line and the woven field, there is the fold — the chevron — a geometry of becoming. It is neither path nor fabric. It is the moment of turning, the decision to rise.”

GARASTOR — Between Form and Form

Scala Paradisi · The Celestial Ladder

Chevron

Pseudo-Dionysius described a ladder of light, each rung a negation that brings the soul closer to what cannot be named. The chevron is that ladder in oak — six islands, six ascents.

Capraia
CapraiaIsola di Capraia
Giannutri
GiannutriIsola di Giannutri
Lipari
LipariIsola di Lipari
Nisida
NisidaIsola di Nisida
Pianosa
PianosaIsola di Pianosa
Salina
SalinaIsola di Salina
Dwelling

“To dwell is to be placed. And to be placed is to stand upon something that holds. The floor is not beneath you — it is around you, the first condition of all inhabitation. Heidegger said: Building is dwelling. But before building, before dwelling — there is the laying of the ground. The floor is the original poem of space.”

Heidegger, Building Dwelling Thinking

Every GARASTOR floor is an answer to the oldest human question: where do I belong?

Opus Dei · The Divine Work

Herringbone

Aquinas saw the cosmos as a fabric — every thread a cause, every crossing a relation. The herringbone is theology in wood: six islands, six weaves of being.

Comacina
ComacinaIsola Comacina
Elba
ElbaIsola d'Elba
Gorgona
GorgonaIsola di Gorgona
Isola Madre
Isola MadreIsola Madre
Zannone
ZannoneIsola di Zannone
Salina
SalinaIsola di Salina
Closing

“In the end, the floor does not speak. It receives. Every fall of light, every bare foot, every child crawling toward the window — the floor holds it all without complaint. That is the dignity of wood: to be walked upon and never diminished, to grow quieter and more beautiful with every passage. A floor is not a surface. It is a life, lived horizontally.”

GARASTOR — La Forma-di-Vita

What you stand upon defines what you stand for.