XTANT
A global gathering in celebration of heritage textiles by @kavitaparmar SAVETHEDATE : 8-12 May, 2026 Palma de Mallorca 📍@palaucanvivot
lov.YATRA | Day 2
lov.YATRA continued into its second day with a visit to La Seu Cathedral in Palma, Mallorca’s most iconic landmark. We experienced the cathedral from within — moving beneath its vast Gothic architecture, entering private spaces usually inaccessible to the public, and witnessing its layers of artistic transformation.
From the Giant Rose Window to Antoni Gaudí’s modernist intervention and Miquel Barceló’s contemporary ceramic chapel, the visit became a quiet encounter with light, stone, and devotion.
From there, the journey continued to Fundació Miró (@miromallorca), where guests entered the world of Joan Miró through his studio, gardens, and the architecture of creative freedom. Miró moved to Palma in 1954 and spent his most prolific years on the island, working from the purpose-built studio designed by his close friend, architect Josep Lluís Sert. The paint-splattered floors remain as he left them.
The afternoon carried this sense of preservation into taste with a visit to Fornet de la Soca (@fornetdelasoca), a historic bakery devoted to reviving forgotten Mallorcan recipes. Through what they describe as archaeological local gastronomy, the bakery rescues flavours, techniques, and traditions once passed through convents, families, and the quiet hands of the island.
As evening arrived, lov.YATRA entered the circular walls of Castell de Bellver. There, guests were invited into a lov. x @_xtant_ exhibition dedicated to the protection of the wool industry, and honouring of natural fibres.
Within the castle’s ancient stone architecture, the night opened into ‘We Grow in Circles’, a peace activation co-created by lov. and artist Orly Anan (@orlyanan). The performance became a portal into ritual, memory, and the collective unconscious.
The day closed at Aethos Club Palma (@aethosmallorca), where guests gathered for an intimate dinner party celebrating textile heritage, performance, and lov. Set to the music of Mallorcan vinyl DJ Alvaro Cobarro (@alvarocobarro), the evening became a continuation of the journey.
lov. x XTANT
lov.YATRA | Day 2
lov.YATRA continued into its second day with a visit to La Seu Cathedral in Palma, Mallorca’s most iconic landmark. We experienced the cathedral from within — moving beneath its vast Gothic architecture, entering private spaces usually inaccessible to the public, and witnessing its layers of artistic transformation.
From the Giant Rose Window to Antoni Gaudí’s modernist intervention and Miquel Barceló’s contemporary ceramic chapel, the visit became a quiet encounter with light, stone, and devotion.
From there, the journey continued to Fundació Miró (@miromallorca), where guests entered the world of Joan Miró through his studio, gardens, and the architecture of creative freedom. Miró moved to Palma in 1954 and spent his most prolific years on the island, working from the purpose-built studio designed by his close friend, architect Josep Lluís Sert. The paint-splattered floors remain as he left them.
The afternoon carried this sense of preservation into taste with a visit to Fornet de la Soca (@fornetdelasoca), a historic bakery devoted to reviving forgotten Mallorcan recipes. Through what they describe as archaeological local gastronomy, the bakery rescues flavours, techniques, and traditions once passed through convents, families, and the quiet hands of the island.
As evening arrived, lov.YATRA entered the circular walls of Castell de Bellver. There, guests were invited into a lov. x @_xtant_ exhibition dedicated to the protection of the wool industry, and honouring of natural fibres.
Within the castle’s ancient stone architecture, the night opened into ‘We Grow in Circles’, a peace activation co-created by lov. and artist Orly Anan (@orlyanan). The performance became a portal into ritual, memory, and the collective unconscious.
The day closed at Aethos Club Palma (@aethosmallorca), where guests gathered for an intimate dinner party celebrating textile heritage, performance, and lov. Set to the music of Mallorcan vinyl DJ Alvaro Cobarro (@alvarocobarro), the evening became a continuation of the journey.
lov. x XTANT

lov.YATRA | Day 2
lov.YATRA continued into its second day with a visit to La Seu Cathedral in Palma, Mallorca’s most iconic landmark. We experienced the cathedral from within — moving beneath its vast Gothic architecture, entering private spaces usually inaccessible to the public, and witnessing its layers of artistic transformation.
From the Giant Rose Window to Antoni Gaudí’s modernist intervention and Miquel Barceló’s contemporary ceramic chapel, the visit became a quiet encounter with light, stone, and devotion.
From there, the journey continued to Fundació Miró (@miromallorca), where guests entered the world of Joan Miró through his studio, gardens, and the architecture of creative freedom. Miró moved to Palma in 1954 and spent his most prolific years on the island, working from the purpose-built studio designed by his close friend, architect Josep Lluís Sert. The paint-splattered floors remain as he left them.
The afternoon carried this sense of preservation into taste with a visit to Fornet de la Soca (@fornetdelasoca), a historic bakery devoted to reviving forgotten Mallorcan recipes. Through what they describe as archaeological local gastronomy, the bakery rescues flavours, techniques, and traditions once passed through convents, families, and the quiet hands of the island.
As evening arrived, lov.YATRA entered the circular walls of Castell de Bellver. There, guests were invited into a lov. x @_xtant_ exhibition dedicated to the protection of the wool industry, and honouring of natural fibres.
Within the castle’s ancient stone architecture, the night opened into ‘We Grow in Circles’, a peace activation co-created by lov. and artist Orly Anan (@orlyanan). The performance became a portal into ritual, memory, and the collective unconscious.
The day closed at Aethos Club Palma (@aethosmallorca), where guests gathered for an intimate dinner party celebrating textile heritage, performance, and lov. Set to the music of Mallorcan vinyl DJ Alvaro Cobarro (@alvarocobarro), the evening became a continuation of the journey.
lov. x XTANT
lov.YATRA | Day 2
lov.YATRA continued into its second day with a visit to La Seu Cathedral in Palma, Mallorca’s most iconic landmark. We experienced the cathedral from within — moving beneath its vast Gothic architecture, entering private spaces usually inaccessible to the public, and witnessing its layers of artistic transformation.
From the Giant Rose Window to Antoni Gaudí’s modernist intervention and Miquel Barceló’s contemporary ceramic chapel, the visit became a quiet encounter with light, stone, and devotion.
From there, the journey continued to Fundació Miró (@miromallorca), where guests entered the world of Joan Miró through his studio, gardens, and the architecture of creative freedom. Miró moved to Palma in 1954 and spent his most prolific years on the island, working from the purpose-built studio designed by his close friend, architect Josep Lluís Sert. The paint-splattered floors remain as he left them.
The afternoon carried this sense of preservation into taste with a visit to Fornet de la Soca (@fornetdelasoca), a historic bakery devoted to reviving forgotten Mallorcan recipes. Through what they describe as archaeological local gastronomy, the bakery rescues flavours, techniques, and traditions once passed through convents, families, and the quiet hands of the island.
As evening arrived, lov.YATRA entered the circular walls of Castell de Bellver. There, guests were invited into a lov. x @_xtant_ exhibition dedicated to the protection of the wool industry, and honouring of natural fibres.
Within the castle’s ancient stone architecture, the night opened into ‘We Grow in Circles’, a peace activation co-created by lov. and artist Orly Anan (@orlyanan). The performance became a portal into ritual, memory, and the collective unconscious.
The day closed at Aethos Club Palma (@aethosmallorca), where guests gathered for an intimate dinner party celebrating textile heritage, performance, and lov. Set to the music of Mallorcan vinyl DJ Alvaro Cobarro (@alvarocobarro), the evening became a continuation of the journey.
lov. x XTANT
lov.YATRA | Day 2
lov.YATRA continued into its second day with a visit to La Seu Cathedral in Palma, Mallorca’s most iconic landmark. We experienced the cathedral from within — moving beneath its vast Gothic architecture, entering private spaces usually inaccessible to the public, and witnessing its layers of artistic transformation.
From the Giant Rose Window to Antoni Gaudí’s modernist intervention and Miquel Barceló’s contemporary ceramic chapel, the visit became a quiet encounter with light, stone, and devotion.
From there, the journey continued to Fundació Miró (@miromallorca), where guests entered the world of Joan Miró through his studio, gardens, and the architecture of creative freedom. Miró moved to Palma in 1954 and spent his most prolific years on the island, working from the purpose-built studio designed by his close friend, architect Josep Lluís Sert. The paint-splattered floors remain as he left them.
The afternoon carried this sense of preservation into taste with a visit to Fornet de la Soca (@fornetdelasoca), a historic bakery devoted to reviving forgotten Mallorcan recipes. Through what they describe as archaeological local gastronomy, the bakery rescues flavours, techniques, and traditions once passed through convents, families, and the quiet hands of the island.
As evening arrived, lov.YATRA entered the circular walls of Castell de Bellver. There, guests were invited into a lov. x @_xtant_ exhibition dedicated to the protection of the wool industry, and honouring of natural fibres.
Within the castle’s ancient stone architecture, the night opened into ‘We Grow in Circles’, a peace activation co-created by lov. and artist Orly Anan (@orlyanan). The performance became a portal into ritual, memory, and the collective unconscious.
The day closed at Aethos Club Palma (@aethosmallorca), where guests gathered for an intimate dinner party celebrating textile heritage, performance, and lov. Set to the music of Mallorcan vinyl DJ Alvaro Cobarro (@alvarocobarro), the evening became a continuation of the journey.
lov. x XTANT

lov.YATRA | Day 2
lov.YATRA continued into its second day with a visit to La Seu Cathedral in Palma, Mallorca’s most iconic landmark. We experienced the cathedral from within — moving beneath its vast Gothic architecture, entering private spaces usually inaccessible to the public, and witnessing its layers of artistic transformation.
From the Giant Rose Window to Antoni Gaudí’s modernist intervention and Miquel Barceló’s contemporary ceramic chapel, the visit became a quiet encounter with light, stone, and devotion.
From there, the journey continued to Fundació Miró (@miromallorca), where guests entered the world of Joan Miró through his studio, gardens, and the architecture of creative freedom. Miró moved to Palma in 1954 and spent his most prolific years on the island, working from the purpose-built studio designed by his close friend, architect Josep Lluís Sert. The paint-splattered floors remain as he left them.
The afternoon carried this sense of preservation into taste with a visit to Fornet de la Soca (@fornetdelasoca), a historic bakery devoted to reviving forgotten Mallorcan recipes. Through what they describe as archaeological local gastronomy, the bakery rescues flavours, techniques, and traditions once passed through convents, families, and the quiet hands of the island.
As evening arrived, lov.YATRA entered the circular walls of Castell de Bellver. There, guests were invited into a lov. x @_xtant_ exhibition dedicated to the protection of the wool industry, and honouring of natural fibres.
Within the castle’s ancient stone architecture, the night opened into ‘We Grow in Circles’, a peace activation co-created by lov. and artist Orly Anan (@orlyanan). The performance became a portal into ritual, memory, and the collective unconscious.
The day closed at Aethos Club Palma (@aethosmallorca), where guests gathered for an intimate dinner party celebrating textile heritage, performance, and lov. Set to the music of Mallorcan vinyl DJ Alvaro Cobarro (@alvarocobarro), the evening became a continuation of the journey.
lov. x XTANT
lov.YATRA | Day 2
lov.YATRA continued into its second day with a visit to La Seu Cathedral in Palma, Mallorca’s most iconic landmark. We experienced the cathedral from within — moving beneath its vast Gothic architecture, entering private spaces usually inaccessible to the public, and witnessing its layers of artistic transformation.
From the Giant Rose Window to Antoni Gaudí’s modernist intervention and Miquel Barceló’s contemporary ceramic chapel, the visit became a quiet encounter with light, stone, and devotion.
From there, the journey continued to Fundació Miró (@miromallorca), where guests entered the world of Joan Miró through his studio, gardens, and the architecture of creative freedom. Miró moved to Palma in 1954 and spent his most prolific years on the island, working from the purpose-built studio designed by his close friend, architect Josep Lluís Sert. The paint-splattered floors remain as he left them.
The afternoon carried this sense of preservation into taste with a visit to Fornet de la Soca (@fornetdelasoca), a historic bakery devoted to reviving forgotten Mallorcan recipes. Through what they describe as archaeological local gastronomy, the bakery rescues flavours, techniques, and traditions once passed through convents, families, and the quiet hands of the island.
As evening arrived, lov.YATRA entered the circular walls of Castell de Bellver. There, guests were invited into a lov. x @_xtant_ exhibition dedicated to the protection of the wool industry, and honouring of natural fibres.
Within the castle’s ancient stone architecture, the night opened into ‘We Grow in Circles’, a peace activation co-created by lov. and artist Orly Anan (@orlyanan). The performance became a portal into ritual, memory, and the collective unconscious.
The day closed at Aethos Club Palma (@aethosmallorca), where guests gathered for an intimate dinner party celebrating textile heritage, performance, and lov. Set to the music of Mallorcan vinyl DJ Alvaro Cobarro (@alvarocobarro), the evening became a continuation of the journey.
lov. x XTANT

lov.YATRA | Day 2
lov.YATRA continued into its second day with a visit to La Seu Cathedral in Palma, Mallorca’s most iconic landmark. We experienced the cathedral from within — moving beneath its vast Gothic architecture, entering private spaces usually inaccessible to the public, and witnessing its layers of artistic transformation.
From the Giant Rose Window to Antoni Gaudí’s modernist intervention and Miquel Barceló’s contemporary ceramic chapel, the visit became a quiet encounter with light, stone, and devotion.
From there, the journey continued to Fundació Miró (@miromallorca), where guests entered the world of Joan Miró through his studio, gardens, and the architecture of creative freedom. Miró moved to Palma in 1954 and spent his most prolific years on the island, working from the purpose-built studio designed by his close friend, architect Josep Lluís Sert. The paint-splattered floors remain as he left them.
The afternoon carried this sense of preservation into taste with a visit to Fornet de la Soca (@fornetdelasoca), a historic bakery devoted to reviving forgotten Mallorcan recipes. Through what they describe as archaeological local gastronomy, the bakery rescues flavours, techniques, and traditions once passed through convents, families, and the quiet hands of the island.
As evening arrived, lov.YATRA entered the circular walls of Castell de Bellver. There, guests were invited into a lov. x @_xtant_ exhibition dedicated to the protection of the wool industry, and honouring of natural fibres.
Within the castle’s ancient stone architecture, the night opened into ‘We Grow in Circles’, a peace activation co-created by lov. and artist Orly Anan (@orlyanan). The performance became a portal into ritual, memory, and the collective unconscious.
The day closed at Aethos Club Palma (@aethosmallorca), where guests gathered for an intimate dinner party celebrating textile heritage, performance, and lov. Set to the music of Mallorcan vinyl DJ Alvaro Cobarro (@alvarocobarro), the evening became a continuation of the journey.
lov. x XTANT
lov.YATRA | Day 2
lov.YATRA continued into its second day with a visit to La Seu Cathedral in Palma, Mallorca’s most iconic landmark. We experienced the cathedral from within — moving beneath its vast Gothic architecture, entering private spaces usually inaccessible to the public, and witnessing its layers of artistic transformation.
From the Giant Rose Window to Antoni Gaudí’s modernist intervention and Miquel Barceló’s contemporary ceramic chapel, the visit became a quiet encounter with light, stone, and devotion.
From there, the journey continued to Fundació Miró (@miromallorca), where guests entered the world of Joan Miró through his studio, gardens, and the architecture of creative freedom. Miró moved to Palma in 1954 and spent his most prolific years on the island, working from the purpose-built studio designed by his close friend, architect Josep Lluís Sert. The paint-splattered floors remain as he left them.
The afternoon carried this sense of preservation into taste with a visit to Fornet de la Soca (@fornetdelasoca), a historic bakery devoted to reviving forgotten Mallorcan recipes. Through what they describe as archaeological local gastronomy, the bakery rescues flavours, techniques, and traditions once passed through convents, families, and the quiet hands of the island.
As evening arrived, lov.YATRA entered the circular walls of Castell de Bellver. There, guests were invited into a lov. x @_xtant_ exhibition dedicated to the protection of the wool industry, and honouring of natural fibres.
Within the castle’s ancient stone architecture, the night opened into ‘We Grow in Circles’, a peace activation co-created by lov. and artist Orly Anan (@orlyanan). The performance became a portal into ritual, memory, and the collective unconscious.
The day closed at Aethos Club Palma (@aethosmallorca), where guests gathered for an intimate dinner party celebrating textile heritage, performance, and lov. Set to the music of Mallorcan vinyl DJ Alvaro Cobarro (@alvarocobarro), the evening became a continuation of the journey.
lov. x XTANT

lov.YATRA | Day 2
lov.YATRA continued into its second day with a visit to La Seu Cathedral in Palma, Mallorca’s most iconic landmark. We experienced the cathedral from within — moving beneath its vast Gothic architecture, entering private spaces usually inaccessible to the public, and witnessing its layers of artistic transformation.
From the Giant Rose Window to Antoni Gaudí’s modernist intervention and Miquel Barceló’s contemporary ceramic chapel, the visit became a quiet encounter with light, stone, and devotion.
From there, the journey continued to Fundació Miró (@miromallorca), where guests entered the world of Joan Miró through his studio, gardens, and the architecture of creative freedom. Miró moved to Palma in 1954 and spent his most prolific years on the island, working from the purpose-built studio designed by his close friend, architect Josep Lluís Sert. The paint-splattered floors remain as he left them.
The afternoon carried this sense of preservation into taste with a visit to Fornet de la Soca (@fornetdelasoca), a historic bakery devoted to reviving forgotten Mallorcan recipes. Through what they describe as archaeological local gastronomy, the bakery rescues flavours, techniques, and traditions once passed through convents, families, and the quiet hands of the island.
As evening arrived, lov.YATRA entered the circular walls of Castell de Bellver. There, guests were invited into a lov. x @_xtant_ exhibition dedicated to the protection of the wool industry, and honouring of natural fibres.
Within the castle’s ancient stone architecture, the night opened into ‘We Grow in Circles’, a peace activation co-created by lov. and artist Orly Anan (@orlyanan). The performance became a portal into ritual, memory, and the collective unconscious.
The day closed at Aethos Club Palma (@aethosmallorca), where guests gathered for an intimate dinner party celebrating textile heritage, performance, and lov. Set to the music of Mallorcan vinyl DJ Alvaro Cobarro (@alvarocobarro), the evening became a continuation of the journey.
lov. x XTANT
lov.YATRA | Day 2
lov.YATRA continued into its second day with a visit to La Seu Cathedral in Palma, Mallorca’s most iconic landmark. We experienced the cathedral from within — moving beneath its vast Gothic architecture, entering private spaces usually inaccessible to the public, and witnessing its layers of artistic transformation.
From the Giant Rose Window to Antoni Gaudí’s modernist intervention and Miquel Barceló’s contemporary ceramic chapel, the visit became a quiet encounter with light, stone, and devotion.
From there, the journey continued to Fundació Miró (@miromallorca), where guests entered the world of Joan Miró through his studio, gardens, and the architecture of creative freedom. Miró moved to Palma in 1954 and spent his most prolific years on the island, working from the purpose-built studio designed by his close friend, architect Josep Lluís Sert. The paint-splattered floors remain as he left them.
The afternoon carried this sense of preservation into taste with a visit to Fornet de la Soca (@fornetdelasoca), a historic bakery devoted to reviving forgotten Mallorcan recipes. Through what they describe as archaeological local gastronomy, the bakery rescues flavours, techniques, and traditions once passed through convents, families, and the quiet hands of the island.
As evening arrived, lov.YATRA entered the circular walls of Castell de Bellver. There, guests were invited into a lov. x @_xtant_ exhibition dedicated to the protection of the wool industry, and honouring of natural fibres.
Within the castle’s ancient stone architecture, the night opened into ‘We Grow in Circles’, a peace activation co-created by lov. and artist Orly Anan (@orlyanan). The performance became a portal into ritual, memory, and the collective unconscious.
The day closed at Aethos Club Palma (@aethosmallorca), where guests gathered for an intimate dinner party celebrating textile heritage, performance, and lov. Set to the music of Mallorcan vinyl DJ Alvaro Cobarro (@alvarocobarro), the evening became a continuation of the journey.
lov. x XTANT
lov.YATRA | Day 2
lov.YATRA continued into its second day with a visit to La Seu Cathedral in Palma, Mallorca’s most iconic landmark. We experienced the cathedral from within — moving beneath its vast Gothic architecture, entering private spaces usually inaccessible to the public, and witnessing its layers of artistic transformation.
From the Giant Rose Window to Antoni Gaudí’s modernist intervention and Miquel Barceló’s contemporary ceramic chapel, the visit became a quiet encounter with light, stone, and devotion.
From there, the journey continued to Fundació Miró (@miromallorca), where guests entered the world of Joan Miró through his studio, gardens, and the architecture of creative freedom. Miró moved to Palma in 1954 and spent his most prolific years on the island, working from the purpose-built studio designed by his close friend, architect Josep Lluís Sert. The paint-splattered floors remain as he left them.
The afternoon carried this sense of preservation into taste with a visit to Fornet de la Soca (@fornetdelasoca), a historic bakery devoted to reviving forgotten Mallorcan recipes. Through what they describe as archaeological local gastronomy, the bakery rescues flavours, techniques, and traditions once passed through convents, families, and the quiet hands of the island.
As evening arrived, lov.YATRA entered the circular walls of Castell de Bellver. There, guests were invited into a lov. x @_xtant_ exhibition dedicated to the protection of the wool industry, and honouring of natural fibres.
Within the castle’s ancient stone architecture, the night opened into ‘We Grow in Circles’, a peace activation co-created by lov. and artist Orly Anan (@orlyanan). The performance became a portal into ritual, memory, and the collective unconscious.
The day closed at Aethos Club Palma (@aethosmallorca), where guests gathered for an intimate dinner party celebrating textile heritage, performance, and lov. Set to the music of Mallorcan vinyl DJ Alvaro Cobarro (@alvarocobarro), the evening became a continuation of the journey.
lov. x XTANT
lov.YATRA | Day 2
lov.YATRA continued into its second day with a visit to La Seu Cathedral in Palma, Mallorca’s most iconic landmark. We experienced the cathedral from within — moving beneath its vast Gothic architecture, entering private spaces usually inaccessible to the public, and witnessing its layers of artistic transformation.
From the Giant Rose Window to Antoni Gaudí’s modernist intervention and Miquel Barceló’s contemporary ceramic chapel, the visit became a quiet encounter with light, stone, and devotion.
From there, the journey continued to Fundació Miró (@miromallorca), where guests entered the world of Joan Miró through his studio, gardens, and the architecture of creative freedom. Miró moved to Palma in 1954 and spent his most prolific years on the island, working from the purpose-built studio designed by his close friend, architect Josep Lluís Sert. The paint-splattered floors remain as he left them.
The afternoon carried this sense of preservation into taste with a visit to Fornet de la Soca (@fornetdelasoca), a historic bakery devoted to reviving forgotten Mallorcan recipes. Through what they describe as archaeological local gastronomy, the bakery rescues flavours, techniques, and traditions once passed through convents, families, and the quiet hands of the island.
As evening arrived, lov.YATRA entered the circular walls of Castell de Bellver. There, guests were invited into a lov. x @_xtant_ exhibition dedicated to the protection of the wool industry, and honouring of natural fibres.
Within the castle’s ancient stone architecture, the night opened into ‘We Grow in Circles’, a peace activation co-created by lov. and artist Orly Anan (@orlyanan). The performance became a portal into ritual, memory, and the collective unconscious.
The day closed at Aethos Club Palma (@aethosmallorca), where guests gathered for an intimate dinner party celebrating textile heritage, performance, and lov. Set to the music of Mallorcan vinyl DJ Alvaro Cobarro (@alvarocobarro), the evening became a continuation of the journey.
lov. x XTANT

lov.YATRA | Day 2
lov.YATRA continued into its second day with a visit to La Seu Cathedral in Palma, Mallorca’s most iconic landmark. We experienced the cathedral from within — moving beneath its vast Gothic architecture, entering private spaces usually inaccessible to the public, and witnessing its layers of artistic transformation.
From the Giant Rose Window to Antoni Gaudí’s modernist intervention and Miquel Barceló’s contemporary ceramic chapel, the visit became a quiet encounter with light, stone, and devotion.
From there, the journey continued to Fundació Miró (@miromallorca), where guests entered the world of Joan Miró through his studio, gardens, and the architecture of creative freedom. Miró moved to Palma in 1954 and spent his most prolific years on the island, working from the purpose-built studio designed by his close friend, architect Josep Lluís Sert. The paint-splattered floors remain as he left them.
The afternoon carried this sense of preservation into taste with a visit to Fornet de la Soca (@fornetdelasoca), a historic bakery devoted to reviving forgotten Mallorcan recipes. Through what they describe as archaeological local gastronomy, the bakery rescues flavours, techniques, and traditions once passed through convents, families, and the quiet hands of the island.
As evening arrived, lov.YATRA entered the circular walls of Castell de Bellver. There, guests were invited into a lov. x @_xtant_ exhibition dedicated to the protection of the wool industry, and honouring of natural fibres.
Within the castle’s ancient stone architecture, the night opened into ‘We Grow in Circles’, a peace activation co-created by lov. and artist Orly Anan (@orlyanan). The performance became a portal into ritual, memory, and the collective unconscious.
The day closed at Aethos Club Palma (@aethosmallorca), where guests gathered for an intimate dinner party celebrating textile heritage, performance, and lov. Set to the music of Mallorcan vinyl DJ Alvaro Cobarro (@alvarocobarro), the evening became a continuation of the journey.
lov. x XTANT
lov.YATRA | Day 2
lov.YATRA continued into its second day with a visit to La Seu Cathedral in Palma, Mallorca’s most iconic landmark. We experienced the cathedral from within — moving beneath its vast Gothic architecture, entering private spaces usually inaccessible to the public, and witnessing its layers of artistic transformation.
From the Giant Rose Window to Antoni Gaudí’s modernist intervention and Miquel Barceló’s contemporary ceramic chapel, the visit became a quiet encounter with light, stone, and devotion.
From there, the journey continued to Fundació Miró (@miromallorca), where guests entered the world of Joan Miró through his studio, gardens, and the architecture of creative freedom. Miró moved to Palma in 1954 and spent his most prolific years on the island, working from the purpose-built studio designed by his close friend, architect Josep Lluís Sert. The paint-splattered floors remain as he left them.
The afternoon carried this sense of preservation into taste with a visit to Fornet de la Soca (@fornetdelasoca), a historic bakery devoted to reviving forgotten Mallorcan recipes. Through what they describe as archaeological local gastronomy, the bakery rescues flavours, techniques, and traditions once passed through convents, families, and the quiet hands of the island.
As evening arrived, lov.YATRA entered the circular walls of Castell de Bellver. There, guests were invited into a lov. x @_xtant_ exhibition dedicated to the protection of the wool industry, and honouring of natural fibres.
Within the castle’s ancient stone architecture, the night opened into ‘We Grow in Circles’, a peace activation co-created by lov. and artist Orly Anan (@orlyanan). The performance became a portal into ritual, memory, and the collective unconscious.
The day closed at Aethos Club Palma (@aethosmallorca), where guests gathered for an intimate dinner party celebrating textile heritage, performance, and lov. Set to the music of Mallorcan vinyl DJ Alvaro Cobarro (@alvarocobarro), the evening became a continuation of the journey.
lov. x XTANT
lov.YATRA | Day 2
lov.YATRA continued into its second day with a visit to La Seu Cathedral in Palma, Mallorca’s most iconic landmark. We experienced the cathedral from within — moving beneath its vast Gothic architecture, entering private spaces usually inaccessible to the public, and witnessing its layers of artistic transformation.
From the Giant Rose Window to Antoni Gaudí’s modernist intervention and Miquel Barceló’s contemporary ceramic chapel, the visit became a quiet encounter with light, stone, and devotion.
From there, the journey continued to Fundació Miró (@miromallorca), where guests entered the world of Joan Miró through his studio, gardens, and the architecture of creative freedom. Miró moved to Palma in 1954 and spent his most prolific years on the island, working from the purpose-built studio designed by his close friend, architect Josep Lluís Sert. The paint-splattered floors remain as he left them.
The afternoon carried this sense of preservation into taste with a visit to Fornet de la Soca (@fornetdelasoca), a historic bakery devoted to reviving forgotten Mallorcan recipes. Through what they describe as archaeological local gastronomy, the bakery rescues flavours, techniques, and traditions once passed through convents, families, and the quiet hands of the island.
As evening arrived, lov.YATRA entered the circular walls of Castell de Bellver. There, guests were invited into a lov. x @_xtant_ exhibition dedicated to the protection of the wool industry, and honouring of natural fibres.
Within the castle’s ancient stone architecture, the night opened into ‘We Grow in Circles’, a peace activation co-created by lov. and artist Orly Anan (@orlyanan). The performance became a portal into ritual, memory, and the collective unconscious.
The day closed at Aethos Club Palma (@aethosmallorca), where guests gathered for an intimate dinner party celebrating textile heritage, performance, and lov. Set to the music of Mallorcan vinyl DJ Alvaro Cobarro (@alvarocobarro), the evening became a continuation of the journey.
lov. x XTANT
lov.YATRA | Day 2
lov.YATRA continued into its second day with a visit to La Seu Cathedral in Palma, Mallorca’s most iconic landmark. We experienced the cathedral from within — moving beneath its vast Gothic architecture, entering private spaces usually inaccessible to the public, and witnessing its layers of artistic transformation.
From the Giant Rose Window to Antoni Gaudí’s modernist intervention and Miquel Barceló’s contemporary ceramic chapel, the visit became a quiet encounter with light, stone, and devotion.
From there, the journey continued to Fundació Miró (@miromallorca), where guests entered the world of Joan Miró through his studio, gardens, and the architecture of creative freedom. Miró moved to Palma in 1954 and spent his most prolific years on the island, working from the purpose-built studio designed by his close friend, architect Josep Lluís Sert. The paint-splattered floors remain as he left them.
The afternoon carried this sense of preservation into taste with a visit to Fornet de la Soca (@fornetdelasoca), a historic bakery devoted to reviving forgotten Mallorcan recipes. Through what they describe as archaeological local gastronomy, the bakery rescues flavours, techniques, and traditions once passed through convents, families, and the quiet hands of the island.
As evening arrived, lov.YATRA entered the circular walls of Castell de Bellver. There, guests were invited into a lov. x @_xtant_ exhibition dedicated to the protection of the wool industry, and honouring of natural fibres.
Within the castle’s ancient stone architecture, the night opened into ‘We Grow in Circles’, a peace activation co-created by lov. and artist Orly Anan (@orlyanan). The performance became a portal into ritual, memory, and the collective unconscious.
The day closed at Aethos Club Palma (@aethosmallorca), where guests gathered for an intimate dinner party celebrating textile heritage, performance, and lov. Set to the music of Mallorcan vinyl DJ Alvaro Cobarro (@alvarocobarro), the evening became a continuation of the journey.
lov. x XTANT

lov.YATRA | Day 2
lov.YATRA continued into its second day with a visit to La Seu Cathedral in Palma, Mallorca’s most iconic landmark. We experienced the cathedral from within — moving beneath its vast Gothic architecture, entering private spaces usually inaccessible to the public, and witnessing its layers of artistic transformation.
From the Giant Rose Window to Antoni Gaudí’s modernist intervention and Miquel Barceló’s contemporary ceramic chapel, the visit became a quiet encounter with light, stone, and devotion.
From there, the journey continued to Fundació Miró (@miromallorca), where guests entered the world of Joan Miró through his studio, gardens, and the architecture of creative freedom. Miró moved to Palma in 1954 and spent his most prolific years on the island, working from the purpose-built studio designed by his close friend, architect Josep Lluís Sert. The paint-splattered floors remain as he left them.
The afternoon carried this sense of preservation into taste with a visit to Fornet de la Soca (@fornetdelasoca), a historic bakery devoted to reviving forgotten Mallorcan recipes. Through what they describe as archaeological local gastronomy, the bakery rescues flavours, techniques, and traditions once passed through convents, families, and the quiet hands of the island.
As evening arrived, lov.YATRA entered the circular walls of Castell de Bellver. There, guests were invited into a lov. x @_xtant_ exhibition dedicated to the protection of the wool industry, and honouring of natural fibres.
Within the castle’s ancient stone architecture, the night opened into ‘We Grow in Circles’, a peace activation co-created by lov. and artist Orly Anan (@orlyanan). The performance became a portal into ritual, memory, and the collective unconscious.
The day closed at Aethos Club Palma (@aethosmallorca), where guests gathered for an intimate dinner party celebrating textile heritage, performance, and lov. Set to the music of Mallorcan vinyl DJ Alvaro Cobarro (@alvarocobarro), the evening became a continuation of the journey.
lov. x XTANT
lov.YATRA | Day 2
lov.YATRA continued into its second day with a visit to La Seu Cathedral in Palma, Mallorca’s most iconic landmark. We experienced the cathedral from within — moving beneath its vast Gothic architecture, entering private spaces usually inaccessible to the public, and witnessing its layers of artistic transformation.
From the Giant Rose Window to Antoni Gaudí’s modernist intervention and Miquel Barceló’s contemporary ceramic chapel, the visit became a quiet encounter with light, stone, and devotion.
From there, the journey continued to Fundació Miró (@miromallorca), where guests entered the world of Joan Miró through his studio, gardens, and the architecture of creative freedom. Miró moved to Palma in 1954 and spent his most prolific years on the island, working from the purpose-built studio designed by his close friend, architect Josep Lluís Sert. The paint-splattered floors remain as he left them.
The afternoon carried this sense of preservation into taste with a visit to Fornet de la Soca (@fornetdelasoca), a historic bakery devoted to reviving forgotten Mallorcan recipes. Through what they describe as archaeological local gastronomy, the bakery rescues flavours, techniques, and traditions once passed through convents, families, and the quiet hands of the island.
As evening arrived, lov.YATRA entered the circular walls of Castell de Bellver. There, guests were invited into a lov. x @_xtant_ exhibition dedicated to the protection of the wool industry, and honouring of natural fibres.
Within the castle’s ancient stone architecture, the night opened into ‘We Grow in Circles’, a peace activation co-created by lov. and artist Orly Anan (@orlyanan). The performance became a portal into ritual, memory, and the collective unconscious.
The day closed at Aethos Club Palma (@aethosmallorca), where guests gathered for an intimate dinner party celebrating textile heritage, performance, and lov. Set to the music of Mallorcan vinyl DJ Alvaro Cobarro (@alvarocobarro), the evening became a continuation of the journey.
lov. x XTANT
lov.YATRA | Day 2
lov.YATRA continued into its second day with a visit to La Seu Cathedral in Palma, Mallorca’s most iconic landmark. We experienced the cathedral from within — moving beneath its vast Gothic architecture, entering private spaces usually inaccessible to the public, and witnessing its layers of artistic transformation.
From the Giant Rose Window to Antoni Gaudí’s modernist intervention and Miquel Barceló’s contemporary ceramic chapel, the visit became a quiet encounter with light, stone, and devotion.
From there, the journey continued to Fundació Miró (@miromallorca), where guests entered the world of Joan Miró through his studio, gardens, and the architecture of creative freedom. Miró moved to Palma in 1954 and spent his most prolific years on the island, working from the purpose-built studio designed by his close friend, architect Josep Lluís Sert. The paint-splattered floors remain as he left them.
The afternoon carried this sense of preservation into taste with a visit to Fornet de la Soca (@fornetdelasoca), a historic bakery devoted to reviving forgotten Mallorcan recipes. Through what they describe as archaeological local gastronomy, the bakery rescues flavours, techniques, and traditions once passed through convents, families, and the quiet hands of the island.
As evening arrived, lov.YATRA entered the circular walls of Castell de Bellver. There, guests were invited into a lov. x @_xtant_ exhibition dedicated to the protection of the wool industry, and honouring of natural fibres.
Within the castle’s ancient stone architecture, the night opened into ‘We Grow in Circles’, a peace activation co-created by lov. and artist Orly Anan (@orlyanan). The performance became a portal into ritual, memory, and the collective unconscious.
The day closed at Aethos Club Palma (@aethosmallorca), where guests gathered for an intimate dinner party celebrating textile heritage, performance, and lov. Set to the music of Mallorcan vinyl DJ Alvaro Cobarro (@alvarocobarro), the evening became a continuation of the journey.
lov. x XTANT

Somnis, 2026.
—Sylvia Sánchez Montoya @_xtant_
Nomad woven lanterns
Materials: Merino wool, Raw silk, Brass
Limited édition
El hada más hermosa ha sonreído
al ver la lumbre de una estrella pálida,
que en hilo suave, blanco y silencioso
se enrosca al huso de su rubia hermana.
Y vuelve a sonreír porque en su rueca
el hilo de los campos se enmaraña.
Tras la tenue cortina de la alcoba
está el jardín envuelto en luz dorada.
La cuna, casi en sombra. El niño duerme.
Dos hadas laboriosas lo acompañan,
hilando de los sueños los sutiles
copos en ruecas de marfil y plata.
⸻Los sueños, Antonio Machado

Somnis, 2026.
—Sylvia Sánchez Montoya @_xtant_
Nomad woven lanterns
Materials: Merino wool, Raw silk, Brass
Limited édition
El hada más hermosa ha sonreído
al ver la lumbre de una estrella pálida,
que en hilo suave, blanco y silencioso
se enrosca al huso de su rubia hermana.
Y vuelve a sonreír porque en su rueca
el hilo de los campos se enmaraña.
Tras la tenue cortina de la alcoba
está el jardín envuelto en luz dorada.
La cuna, casi en sombra. El niño duerme.
Dos hadas laboriosas lo acompañan,
hilando de los sueños los sutiles
copos en ruecas de marfil y plata.
⸻Los sueños, Antonio Machado

Somnis, 2026.
—Sylvia Sánchez Montoya @_xtant_
Nomad woven lanterns
Materials: Merino wool, Raw silk, Brass
Limited édition
El hada más hermosa ha sonreído
al ver la lumbre de una estrella pálida,
que en hilo suave, blanco y silencioso
se enrosca al huso de su rubia hermana.
Y vuelve a sonreír porque en su rueca
el hilo de los campos se enmaraña.
Tras la tenue cortina de la alcoba
está el jardín envuelto en luz dorada.
La cuna, casi en sombra. El niño duerme.
Dos hadas laboriosas lo acompañan,
hilando de los sueños los sutiles
copos en ruecas de marfil y plata.
⸻Los sueños, Antonio Machado

Somnis, 2026.
—Sylvia Sánchez Montoya @_xtant_
Nomad woven lanterns
Materials: Merino wool, Raw silk, Brass
Limited édition
El hada más hermosa ha sonreído
al ver la lumbre de una estrella pálida,
que en hilo suave, blanco y silencioso
se enrosca al huso de su rubia hermana.
Y vuelve a sonreír porque en su rueca
el hilo de los campos se enmaraña.
Tras la tenue cortina de la alcoba
está el jardín envuelto en luz dorada.
La cuna, casi en sombra. El niño duerme.
Dos hadas laboriosas lo acompañan,
hilando de los sueños los sutiles
copos en ruecas de marfil y plata.
⸻Los sueños, Antonio Machado

Somnis, 2026.
—Sylvia Sánchez Montoya @_xtant_
Nomad woven lanterns
Materials: Merino wool, Raw silk, Brass
Limited édition
El hada más hermosa ha sonreído
al ver la lumbre de una estrella pálida,
que en hilo suave, blanco y silencioso
se enrosca al huso de su rubia hermana.
Y vuelve a sonreír porque en su rueca
el hilo de los campos se enmaraña.
Tras la tenue cortina de la alcoba
está el jardín envuelto en luz dorada.
La cuna, casi en sombra. El niño duerme.
Dos hadas laboriosas lo acompañan,
hilando de los sueños los sutiles
copos en ruecas de marfil y plata.
⸻Los sueños, Antonio Machado

Somnis, 2026.
—Sylvia Sánchez Montoya @_xtant_
Nomad woven lanterns
Materials: Merino wool, Raw silk, Brass
Limited édition
El hada más hermosa ha sonreído
al ver la lumbre de una estrella pálida,
que en hilo suave, blanco y silencioso
se enrosca al huso de su rubia hermana.
Y vuelve a sonreír porque en su rueca
el hilo de los campos se enmaraña.
Tras la tenue cortina de la alcoba
está el jardín envuelto en luz dorada.
La cuna, casi en sombra. El niño duerme.
Dos hadas laboriosas lo acompañan,
hilando de los sueños los sutiles
copos en ruecas de marfil y plata.
⸻Los sueños, Antonio Machado

Somnis, 2026.
—Sylvia Sánchez Montoya @_xtant_
Nomad woven lanterns
Materials: Merino wool, Raw silk, Brass
Limited édition
El hada más hermosa ha sonreído
al ver la lumbre de una estrella pálida,
que en hilo suave, blanco y silencioso
se enrosca al huso de su rubia hermana.
Y vuelve a sonreír porque en su rueca
el hilo de los campos se enmaraña.
Tras la tenue cortina de la alcoba
está el jardín envuelto en luz dorada.
La cuna, casi en sombra. El niño duerme.
Dos hadas laboriosas lo acompañan,
hilando de los sueños los sutiles
copos en ruecas de marfil y plata.
⸻Los sueños, Antonio Machado

Somnis, 2026.
—Sylvia Sánchez Montoya @_xtant_
Nomad woven lanterns
Materials: Merino wool, Raw silk, Brass
Limited édition
El hada más hermosa ha sonreído
al ver la lumbre de una estrella pálida,
que en hilo suave, blanco y silencioso
se enrosca al huso de su rubia hermana.
Y vuelve a sonreír porque en su rueca
el hilo de los campos se enmaraña.
Tras la tenue cortina de la alcoba
está el jardín envuelto en luz dorada.
La cuna, casi en sombra. El niño duerme.
Dos hadas laboriosas lo acompañan,
hilando de los sueños los sutiles
copos en ruecas de marfil y plata.
⸻Los sueños, Antonio Machado
lov.YATRA | Day 1
The inaugural edition of lov.YATRA opened in Mallorca, bringing together thought leaders, artists, artisans, and cultural voices to explore textile heritage, craftsmanship, and the wisdom carried through making.
The opening ceremony, followed by a private preview of XTANT (@_xtant_), the annual textile art festival that gathers artisans, craftswomen, makers, and thinkers from cultures around the world through the shared language of textiles. For lov., this peaceful co-flourishing is made visible: traditions sustained through exchange, creativity becoming a bridge between people, and coexistence expressed through craft, beauty, and human connection.
At the centre of the evening was lov.gallery, a space within XTANT where art and textile traditions meet contemporary voices, making coexistence visible through material, memory, and form. Curated by founder of XTANT, Kavita Parmar (@kavitaparmar), the exhibition brought together works by Greek artist, Irini Gonou (@irini.gonou) and textile students from Shenkar College of Engineering, Design and Art (@shenkar_college @textile_shenkar), Yara Shehady (@yarashehady) and Ariel Ben Moshe, inviting us to encounter making as ritual, beauty as connection, and craft as a living language between cultures.
All of this unfolded within the quiet grandeur of Can Vivot (@palaucanvivot), graciously hosted by Dr. Pedro de Montaner, Count of Zavellá, whose family has stewarded the 14th-century palacio for twenty-one generations.
The evening closed around the table at Petit La Sang (@petit_lasang) helmed by Swedish sommelier and restauranteur Lukas Lundgren, where Mallorcan hospitality revealed itself through taste, gesture, and care. Each plate felt considered, each glass of artisan wine carried the character of the land, and the evening unfolded with the quiet generosity of people who know how to make others feel held.
This was the beginning.
A journey through craft, ritual, and love — the one without ego.
lov. x XTANT

lov.YATRA | Day 1
The inaugural edition of lov.YATRA opened in Mallorca, bringing together thought leaders, artists, artisans, and cultural voices to explore textile heritage, craftsmanship, and the wisdom carried through making.
The opening ceremony, followed by a private preview of XTANT (@_xtant_), the annual textile art festival that gathers artisans, craftswomen, makers, and thinkers from cultures around the world through the shared language of textiles. For lov., this peaceful co-flourishing is made visible: traditions sustained through exchange, creativity becoming a bridge between people, and coexistence expressed through craft, beauty, and human connection.
At the centre of the evening was lov.gallery, a space within XTANT where art and textile traditions meet contemporary voices, making coexistence visible through material, memory, and form. Curated by founder of XTANT, Kavita Parmar (@kavitaparmar), the exhibition brought together works by Greek artist, Irini Gonou (@irini.gonou) and textile students from Shenkar College of Engineering, Design and Art (@shenkar_college @textile_shenkar), Yara Shehady (@yarashehady) and Ariel Ben Moshe, inviting us to encounter making as ritual, beauty as connection, and craft as a living language between cultures.
All of this unfolded within the quiet grandeur of Can Vivot (@palaucanvivot), graciously hosted by Dr. Pedro de Montaner, Count of Zavellá, whose family has stewarded the 14th-century palacio for twenty-one generations.
The evening closed around the table at Petit La Sang (@petit_lasang) helmed by Swedish sommelier and restauranteur Lukas Lundgren, where Mallorcan hospitality revealed itself through taste, gesture, and care. Each plate felt considered, each glass of artisan wine carried the character of the land, and the evening unfolded with the quiet generosity of people who know how to make others feel held.
This was the beginning.
A journey through craft, ritual, and love — the one without ego.
lov. x XTANT
lov.YATRA | Day 1
The inaugural edition of lov.YATRA opened in Mallorca, bringing together thought leaders, artists, artisans, and cultural voices to explore textile heritage, craftsmanship, and the wisdom carried through making.
The opening ceremony, followed by a private preview of XTANT (@_xtant_), the annual textile art festival that gathers artisans, craftswomen, makers, and thinkers from cultures around the world through the shared language of textiles. For lov., this peaceful co-flourishing is made visible: traditions sustained through exchange, creativity becoming a bridge between people, and coexistence expressed through craft, beauty, and human connection.
At the centre of the evening was lov.gallery, a space within XTANT where art and textile traditions meet contemporary voices, making coexistence visible through material, memory, and form. Curated by founder of XTANT, Kavita Parmar (@kavitaparmar), the exhibition brought together works by Greek artist, Irini Gonou (@irini.gonou) and textile students from Shenkar College of Engineering, Design and Art (@shenkar_college @textile_shenkar), Yara Shehady (@yarashehady) and Ariel Ben Moshe, inviting us to encounter making as ritual, beauty as connection, and craft as a living language between cultures.
All of this unfolded within the quiet grandeur of Can Vivot (@palaucanvivot), graciously hosted by Dr. Pedro de Montaner, Count of Zavellá, whose family has stewarded the 14th-century palacio for twenty-one generations.
The evening closed around the table at Petit La Sang (@petit_lasang) helmed by Swedish sommelier and restauranteur Lukas Lundgren, where Mallorcan hospitality revealed itself through taste, gesture, and care. Each plate felt considered, each glass of artisan wine carried the character of the land, and the evening unfolded with the quiet generosity of people who know how to make others feel held.
This was the beginning.
A journey through craft, ritual, and love — the one without ego.
lov. x XTANT

lov.YATRA | Day 1
The inaugural edition of lov.YATRA opened in Mallorca, bringing together thought leaders, artists, artisans, and cultural voices to explore textile heritage, craftsmanship, and the wisdom carried through making.
The opening ceremony, followed by a private preview of XTANT (@_xtant_), the annual textile art festival that gathers artisans, craftswomen, makers, and thinkers from cultures around the world through the shared language of textiles. For lov., this peaceful co-flourishing is made visible: traditions sustained through exchange, creativity becoming a bridge between people, and coexistence expressed through craft, beauty, and human connection.
At the centre of the evening was lov.gallery, a space within XTANT where art and textile traditions meet contemporary voices, making coexistence visible through material, memory, and form. Curated by founder of XTANT, Kavita Parmar (@kavitaparmar), the exhibition brought together works by Greek artist, Irini Gonou (@irini.gonou) and textile students from Shenkar College of Engineering, Design and Art (@shenkar_college @textile_shenkar), Yara Shehady (@yarashehady) and Ariel Ben Moshe, inviting us to encounter making as ritual, beauty as connection, and craft as a living language between cultures.
All of this unfolded within the quiet grandeur of Can Vivot (@palaucanvivot), graciously hosted by Dr. Pedro de Montaner, Count of Zavellá, whose family has stewarded the 14th-century palacio for twenty-one generations.
The evening closed around the table at Petit La Sang (@petit_lasang) helmed by Swedish sommelier and restauranteur Lukas Lundgren, where Mallorcan hospitality revealed itself through taste, gesture, and care. Each plate felt considered, each glass of artisan wine carried the character of the land, and the evening unfolded with the quiet generosity of people who know how to make others feel held.
This was the beginning.
A journey through craft, ritual, and love — the one without ego.
lov. x XTANT
lov.YATRA | Day 1
The inaugural edition of lov.YATRA opened in Mallorca, bringing together thought leaders, artists, artisans, and cultural voices to explore textile heritage, craftsmanship, and the wisdom carried through making.
The opening ceremony, followed by a private preview of XTANT (@_xtant_), the annual textile art festival that gathers artisans, craftswomen, makers, and thinkers from cultures around the world through the shared language of textiles. For lov., this peaceful co-flourishing is made visible: traditions sustained through exchange, creativity becoming a bridge between people, and coexistence expressed through craft, beauty, and human connection.
At the centre of the evening was lov.gallery, a space within XTANT where art and textile traditions meet contemporary voices, making coexistence visible through material, memory, and form. Curated by founder of XTANT, Kavita Parmar (@kavitaparmar), the exhibition brought together works by Greek artist, Irini Gonou (@irini.gonou) and textile students from Shenkar College of Engineering, Design and Art (@shenkar_college @textile_shenkar), Yara Shehady (@yarashehady) and Ariel Ben Moshe, inviting us to encounter making as ritual, beauty as connection, and craft as a living language between cultures.
All of this unfolded within the quiet grandeur of Can Vivot (@palaucanvivot), graciously hosted by Dr. Pedro de Montaner, Count of Zavellá, whose family has stewarded the 14th-century palacio for twenty-one generations.
The evening closed around the table at Petit La Sang (@petit_lasang) helmed by Swedish sommelier and restauranteur Lukas Lundgren, where Mallorcan hospitality revealed itself through taste, gesture, and care. Each plate felt considered, each glass of artisan wine carried the character of the land, and the evening unfolded with the quiet generosity of people who know how to make others feel held.
This was the beginning.
A journey through craft, ritual, and love — the one without ego.
lov. x XTANT

lov.YATRA | Day 1
The inaugural edition of lov.YATRA opened in Mallorca, bringing together thought leaders, artists, artisans, and cultural voices to explore textile heritage, craftsmanship, and the wisdom carried through making.
The opening ceremony, followed by a private preview of XTANT (@_xtant_), the annual textile art festival that gathers artisans, craftswomen, makers, and thinkers from cultures around the world through the shared language of textiles. For lov., this peaceful co-flourishing is made visible: traditions sustained through exchange, creativity becoming a bridge between people, and coexistence expressed through craft, beauty, and human connection.
At the centre of the evening was lov.gallery, a space within XTANT where art and textile traditions meet contemporary voices, making coexistence visible through material, memory, and form. Curated by founder of XTANT, Kavita Parmar (@kavitaparmar), the exhibition brought together works by Greek artist, Irini Gonou (@irini.gonou) and textile students from Shenkar College of Engineering, Design and Art (@shenkar_college @textile_shenkar), Yara Shehady (@yarashehady) and Ariel Ben Moshe, inviting us to encounter making as ritual, beauty as connection, and craft as a living language between cultures.
All of this unfolded within the quiet grandeur of Can Vivot (@palaucanvivot), graciously hosted by Dr. Pedro de Montaner, Count of Zavellá, whose family has stewarded the 14th-century palacio for twenty-one generations.
The evening closed around the table at Petit La Sang (@petit_lasang) helmed by Swedish sommelier and restauranteur Lukas Lundgren, where Mallorcan hospitality revealed itself through taste, gesture, and care. Each plate felt considered, each glass of artisan wine carried the character of the land, and the evening unfolded with the quiet generosity of people who know how to make others feel held.
This was the beginning.
A journey through craft, ritual, and love — the one without ego.
lov. x XTANT
lov.YATRA | Day 1
The inaugural edition of lov.YATRA opened in Mallorca, bringing together thought leaders, artists, artisans, and cultural voices to explore textile heritage, craftsmanship, and the wisdom carried through making.
The opening ceremony, followed by a private preview of XTANT (@_xtant_), the annual textile art festival that gathers artisans, craftswomen, makers, and thinkers from cultures around the world through the shared language of textiles. For lov., this peaceful co-flourishing is made visible: traditions sustained through exchange, creativity becoming a bridge between people, and coexistence expressed through craft, beauty, and human connection.
At the centre of the evening was lov.gallery, a space within XTANT where art and textile traditions meet contemporary voices, making coexistence visible through material, memory, and form. Curated by founder of XTANT, Kavita Parmar (@kavitaparmar), the exhibition brought together works by Greek artist, Irini Gonou (@irini.gonou) and textile students from Shenkar College of Engineering, Design and Art (@shenkar_college @textile_shenkar), Yara Shehady (@yarashehady) and Ariel Ben Moshe, inviting us to encounter making as ritual, beauty as connection, and craft as a living language between cultures.
All of this unfolded within the quiet grandeur of Can Vivot (@palaucanvivot), graciously hosted by Dr. Pedro de Montaner, Count of Zavellá, whose family has stewarded the 14th-century palacio for twenty-one generations.
The evening closed around the table at Petit La Sang (@petit_lasang) helmed by Swedish sommelier and restauranteur Lukas Lundgren, where Mallorcan hospitality revealed itself through taste, gesture, and care. Each plate felt considered, each glass of artisan wine carried the character of the land, and the evening unfolded with the quiet generosity of people who know how to make others feel held.
This was the beginning.
A journey through craft, ritual, and love — the one without ego.
lov. x XTANT

lov.YATRA | Day 1
The inaugural edition of lov.YATRA opened in Mallorca, bringing together thought leaders, artists, artisans, and cultural voices to explore textile heritage, craftsmanship, and the wisdom carried through making.
The opening ceremony, followed by a private preview of XTANT (@_xtant_), the annual textile art festival that gathers artisans, craftswomen, makers, and thinkers from cultures around the world through the shared language of textiles. For lov., this peaceful co-flourishing is made visible: traditions sustained through exchange, creativity becoming a bridge between people, and coexistence expressed through craft, beauty, and human connection.
At the centre of the evening was lov.gallery, a space within XTANT where art and textile traditions meet contemporary voices, making coexistence visible through material, memory, and form. Curated by founder of XTANT, Kavita Parmar (@kavitaparmar), the exhibition brought together works by Greek artist, Irini Gonou (@irini.gonou) and textile students from Shenkar College of Engineering, Design and Art (@shenkar_college @textile_shenkar), Yara Shehady (@yarashehady) and Ariel Ben Moshe, inviting us to encounter making as ritual, beauty as connection, and craft as a living language between cultures.
All of this unfolded within the quiet grandeur of Can Vivot (@palaucanvivot), graciously hosted by Dr. Pedro de Montaner, Count of Zavellá, whose family has stewarded the 14th-century palacio for twenty-one generations.
The evening closed around the table at Petit La Sang (@petit_lasang) helmed by Swedish sommelier and restauranteur Lukas Lundgren, where Mallorcan hospitality revealed itself through taste, gesture, and care. Each plate felt considered, each glass of artisan wine carried the character of the land, and the evening unfolded with the quiet generosity of people who know how to make others feel held.
This was the beginning.
A journey through craft, ritual, and love — the one without ego.
lov. x XTANT
lov.YATRA | Day 1
The inaugural edition of lov.YATRA opened in Mallorca, bringing together thought leaders, artists, artisans, and cultural voices to explore textile heritage, craftsmanship, and the wisdom carried through making.
The opening ceremony, followed by a private preview of XTANT (@_xtant_), the annual textile art festival that gathers artisans, craftswomen, makers, and thinkers from cultures around the world through the shared language of textiles. For lov., this peaceful co-flourishing is made visible: traditions sustained through exchange, creativity becoming a bridge between people, and coexistence expressed through craft, beauty, and human connection.
At the centre of the evening was lov.gallery, a space within XTANT where art and textile traditions meet contemporary voices, making coexistence visible through material, memory, and form. Curated by founder of XTANT, Kavita Parmar (@kavitaparmar), the exhibition brought together works by Greek artist, Irini Gonou (@irini.gonou) and textile students from Shenkar College of Engineering, Design and Art (@shenkar_college @textile_shenkar), Yara Shehady (@yarashehady) and Ariel Ben Moshe, inviting us to encounter making as ritual, beauty as connection, and craft as a living language between cultures.
All of this unfolded within the quiet grandeur of Can Vivot (@palaucanvivot), graciously hosted by Dr. Pedro de Montaner, Count of Zavellá, whose family has stewarded the 14th-century palacio for twenty-one generations.
The evening closed around the table at Petit La Sang (@petit_lasang) helmed by Swedish sommelier and restauranteur Lukas Lundgren, where Mallorcan hospitality revealed itself through taste, gesture, and care. Each plate felt considered, each glass of artisan wine carried the character of the land, and the evening unfolded with the quiet generosity of people who know how to make others feel held.
This was the beginning.
A journey through craft, ritual, and love — the one without ego.
lov. x XTANT

lov.YATRA | Day 1
The inaugural edition of lov.YATRA opened in Mallorca, bringing together thought leaders, artists, artisans, and cultural voices to explore textile heritage, craftsmanship, and the wisdom carried through making.
The opening ceremony, followed by a private preview of XTANT (@_xtant_), the annual textile art festival that gathers artisans, craftswomen, makers, and thinkers from cultures around the world through the shared language of textiles. For lov., this peaceful co-flourishing is made visible: traditions sustained through exchange, creativity becoming a bridge between people, and coexistence expressed through craft, beauty, and human connection.
At the centre of the evening was lov.gallery, a space within XTANT where art and textile traditions meet contemporary voices, making coexistence visible through material, memory, and form. Curated by founder of XTANT, Kavita Parmar (@kavitaparmar), the exhibition brought together works by Greek artist, Irini Gonou (@irini.gonou) and textile students from Shenkar College of Engineering, Design and Art (@shenkar_college @textile_shenkar), Yara Shehady (@yarashehady) and Ariel Ben Moshe, inviting us to encounter making as ritual, beauty as connection, and craft as a living language between cultures.
All of this unfolded within the quiet grandeur of Can Vivot (@palaucanvivot), graciously hosted by Dr. Pedro de Montaner, Count of Zavellá, whose family has stewarded the 14th-century palacio for twenty-one generations.
The evening closed around the table at Petit La Sang (@petit_lasang) helmed by Swedish sommelier and restauranteur Lukas Lundgren, where Mallorcan hospitality revealed itself through taste, gesture, and care. Each plate felt considered, each glass of artisan wine carried the character of the land, and the evening unfolded with the quiet generosity of people who know how to make others feel held.
This was the beginning.
A journey through craft, ritual, and love — the one without ego.
lov. x XTANT
lov.YATRA | Day 1
The inaugural edition of lov.YATRA opened in Mallorca, bringing together thought leaders, artists, artisans, and cultural voices to explore textile heritage, craftsmanship, and the wisdom carried through making.
The opening ceremony, followed by a private preview of XTANT (@_xtant_), the annual textile art festival that gathers artisans, craftswomen, makers, and thinkers from cultures around the world through the shared language of textiles. For lov., this peaceful co-flourishing is made visible: traditions sustained through exchange, creativity becoming a bridge between people, and coexistence expressed through craft, beauty, and human connection.
At the centre of the evening was lov.gallery, a space within XTANT where art and textile traditions meet contemporary voices, making coexistence visible through material, memory, and form. Curated by founder of XTANT, Kavita Parmar (@kavitaparmar), the exhibition brought together works by Greek artist, Irini Gonou (@irini.gonou) and textile students from Shenkar College of Engineering, Design and Art (@shenkar_college @textile_shenkar), Yara Shehady (@yarashehady) and Ariel Ben Moshe, inviting us to encounter making as ritual, beauty as connection, and craft as a living language between cultures.
All of this unfolded within the quiet grandeur of Can Vivot (@palaucanvivot), graciously hosted by Dr. Pedro de Montaner, Count of Zavellá, whose family has stewarded the 14th-century palacio for twenty-one generations.
The evening closed around the table at Petit La Sang (@petit_lasang) helmed by Swedish sommelier and restauranteur Lukas Lundgren, where Mallorcan hospitality revealed itself through taste, gesture, and care. Each plate felt considered, each glass of artisan wine carried the character of the land, and the evening unfolded with the quiet generosity of people who know how to make others feel held.
This was the beginning.
A journey through craft, ritual, and love — the one without ego.
lov. x XTANT

lov.YATRA | Day 1
The inaugural edition of lov.YATRA opened in Mallorca, bringing together thought leaders, artists, artisans, and cultural voices to explore textile heritage, craftsmanship, and the wisdom carried through making.
The opening ceremony, followed by a private preview of XTANT (@_xtant_), the annual textile art festival that gathers artisans, craftswomen, makers, and thinkers from cultures around the world through the shared language of textiles. For lov., this peaceful co-flourishing is made visible: traditions sustained through exchange, creativity becoming a bridge between people, and coexistence expressed through craft, beauty, and human connection.
At the centre of the evening was lov.gallery, a space within XTANT where art and textile traditions meet contemporary voices, making coexistence visible through material, memory, and form. Curated by founder of XTANT, Kavita Parmar (@kavitaparmar), the exhibition brought together works by Greek artist, Irini Gonou (@irini.gonou) and textile students from Shenkar College of Engineering, Design and Art (@shenkar_college @textile_shenkar), Yara Shehady (@yarashehady) and Ariel Ben Moshe, inviting us to encounter making as ritual, beauty as connection, and craft as a living language between cultures.
All of this unfolded within the quiet grandeur of Can Vivot (@palaucanvivot), graciously hosted by Dr. Pedro de Montaner, Count of Zavellá, whose family has stewarded the 14th-century palacio for twenty-one generations.
The evening closed around the table at Petit La Sang (@petit_lasang) helmed by Swedish sommelier and restauranteur Lukas Lundgren, where Mallorcan hospitality revealed itself through taste, gesture, and care. Each plate felt considered, each glass of artisan wine carried the character of the land, and the evening unfolded with the quiet generosity of people who know how to make others feel held.
This was the beginning.
A journey through craft, ritual, and love — the one without ego.
lov. x XTANT
lov.YATRA | Day 1
The inaugural edition of lov.YATRA opened in Mallorca, bringing together thought leaders, artists, artisans, and cultural voices to explore textile heritage, craftsmanship, and the wisdom carried through making.
The opening ceremony, followed by a private preview of XTANT (@_xtant_), the annual textile art festival that gathers artisans, craftswomen, makers, and thinkers from cultures around the world through the shared language of textiles. For lov., this peaceful co-flourishing is made visible: traditions sustained through exchange, creativity becoming a bridge between people, and coexistence expressed through craft, beauty, and human connection.
At the centre of the evening was lov.gallery, a space within XTANT where art and textile traditions meet contemporary voices, making coexistence visible through material, memory, and form. Curated by founder of XTANT, Kavita Parmar (@kavitaparmar), the exhibition brought together works by Greek artist, Irini Gonou (@irini.gonou) and textile students from Shenkar College of Engineering, Design and Art (@shenkar_college @textile_shenkar), Yara Shehady (@yarashehady) and Ariel Ben Moshe, inviting us to encounter making as ritual, beauty as connection, and craft as a living language between cultures.
All of this unfolded within the quiet grandeur of Can Vivot (@palaucanvivot), graciously hosted by Dr. Pedro de Montaner, Count of Zavellá, whose family has stewarded the 14th-century palacio for twenty-one generations.
The evening closed around the table at Petit La Sang (@petit_lasang) helmed by Swedish sommelier and restauranteur Lukas Lundgren, where Mallorcan hospitality revealed itself through taste, gesture, and care. Each plate felt considered, each glass of artisan wine carried the character of the land, and the evening unfolded with the quiet generosity of people who know how to make others feel held.
This was the beginning.
A journey through craft, ritual, and love — the one without ego.
lov. x XTANT

lov.YATRA | Day 1
The inaugural edition of lov.YATRA opened in Mallorca, bringing together thought leaders, artists, artisans, and cultural voices to explore textile heritage, craftsmanship, and the wisdom carried through making.
The opening ceremony, followed by a private preview of XTANT (@_xtant_), the annual textile art festival that gathers artisans, craftswomen, makers, and thinkers from cultures around the world through the shared language of textiles. For lov., this peaceful co-flourishing is made visible: traditions sustained through exchange, creativity becoming a bridge between people, and coexistence expressed through craft, beauty, and human connection.
At the centre of the evening was lov.gallery, a space within XTANT where art and textile traditions meet contemporary voices, making coexistence visible through material, memory, and form. Curated by founder of XTANT, Kavita Parmar (@kavitaparmar), the exhibition brought together works by Greek artist, Irini Gonou (@irini.gonou) and textile students from Shenkar College of Engineering, Design and Art (@shenkar_college @textile_shenkar), Yara Shehady (@yarashehady) and Ariel Ben Moshe, inviting us to encounter making as ritual, beauty as connection, and craft as a living language between cultures.
All of this unfolded within the quiet grandeur of Can Vivot (@palaucanvivot), graciously hosted by Dr. Pedro de Montaner, Count of Zavellá, whose family has stewarded the 14th-century palacio for twenty-one generations.
The evening closed around the table at Petit La Sang (@petit_lasang) helmed by Swedish sommelier and restauranteur Lukas Lundgren, where Mallorcan hospitality revealed itself through taste, gesture, and care. Each plate felt considered, each glass of artisan wine carried the character of the land, and the evening unfolded with the quiet generosity of people who know how to make others feel held.
This was the beginning.
A journey through craft, ritual, and love — the one without ego.
lov. x XTANT

lov.YATRA | Day 1
The inaugural edition of lov.YATRA opened in Mallorca, bringing together thought leaders, artists, artisans, and cultural voices to explore textile heritage, craftsmanship, and the wisdom carried through making.
The opening ceremony, followed by a private preview of XTANT (@_xtant_), the annual textile art festival that gathers artisans, craftswomen, makers, and thinkers from cultures around the world through the shared language of textiles. For lov., this peaceful co-flourishing is made visible: traditions sustained through exchange, creativity becoming a bridge between people, and coexistence expressed through craft, beauty, and human connection.
At the centre of the evening was lov.gallery, a space within XTANT where art and textile traditions meet contemporary voices, making coexistence visible through material, memory, and form. Curated by founder of XTANT, Kavita Parmar (@kavitaparmar), the exhibition brought together works by Greek artist, Irini Gonou (@irini.gonou) and textile students from Shenkar College of Engineering, Design and Art (@shenkar_college @textile_shenkar), Yara Shehady (@yarashehady) and Ariel Ben Moshe, inviting us to encounter making as ritual, beauty as connection, and craft as a living language between cultures.
All of this unfolded within the quiet grandeur of Can Vivot (@palaucanvivot), graciously hosted by Dr. Pedro de Montaner, Count of Zavellá, whose family has stewarded the 14th-century palacio for twenty-one generations.
The evening closed around the table at Petit La Sang (@petit_lasang) helmed by Swedish sommelier and restauranteur Lukas Lundgren, where Mallorcan hospitality revealed itself through taste, gesture, and care. Each plate felt considered, each glass of artisan wine carried the character of the land, and the evening unfolded with the quiet generosity of people who know how to make others feel held.
This was the beginning.
A journey through craft, ritual, and love — the one without ego.
lov. x XTANT
lov.YATRA | Day 1
The inaugural edition of lov.YATRA opened in Mallorca, bringing together thought leaders, artists, artisans, and cultural voices to explore textile heritage, craftsmanship, and the wisdom carried through making.
The opening ceremony, followed by a private preview of XTANT (@_xtant_), the annual textile art festival that gathers artisans, craftswomen, makers, and thinkers from cultures around the world through the shared language of textiles. For lov., this peaceful co-flourishing is made visible: traditions sustained through exchange, creativity becoming a bridge between people, and coexistence expressed through craft, beauty, and human connection.
At the centre of the evening was lov.gallery, a space within XTANT where art and textile traditions meet contemporary voices, making coexistence visible through material, memory, and form. Curated by founder of XTANT, Kavita Parmar (@kavitaparmar), the exhibition brought together works by Greek artist, Irini Gonou (@irini.gonou) and textile students from Shenkar College of Engineering, Design and Art (@shenkar_college @textile_shenkar), Yara Shehady (@yarashehady) and Ariel Ben Moshe, inviting us to encounter making as ritual, beauty as connection, and craft as a living language between cultures.
All of this unfolded within the quiet grandeur of Can Vivot (@palaucanvivot), graciously hosted by Dr. Pedro de Montaner, Count of Zavellá, whose family has stewarded the 14th-century palacio for twenty-one generations.
The evening closed around the table at Petit La Sang (@petit_lasang) helmed by Swedish sommelier and restauranteur Lukas Lundgren, where Mallorcan hospitality revealed itself through taste, gesture, and care. Each plate felt considered, each glass of artisan wine carried the character of the land, and the evening unfolded with the quiet generosity of people who know how to make others feel held.
This was the beginning.
A journey through craft, ritual, and love — the one without ego.
lov. x XTANT

lov.YATRA | Day 1
The inaugural edition of lov.YATRA opened in Mallorca, bringing together thought leaders, artists, artisans, and cultural voices to explore textile heritage, craftsmanship, and the wisdom carried through making.
The opening ceremony, followed by a private preview of XTANT (@_xtant_), the annual textile art festival that gathers artisans, craftswomen, makers, and thinkers from cultures around the world through the shared language of textiles. For lov., this peaceful co-flourishing is made visible: traditions sustained through exchange, creativity becoming a bridge between people, and coexistence expressed through craft, beauty, and human connection.
At the centre of the evening was lov.gallery, a space within XTANT where art and textile traditions meet contemporary voices, making coexistence visible through material, memory, and form. Curated by founder of XTANT, Kavita Parmar (@kavitaparmar), the exhibition brought together works by Greek artist, Irini Gonou (@irini.gonou) and textile students from Shenkar College of Engineering, Design and Art (@shenkar_college @textile_shenkar), Yara Shehady (@yarashehady) and Ariel Ben Moshe, inviting us to encounter making as ritual, beauty as connection, and craft as a living language between cultures.
All of this unfolded within the quiet grandeur of Can Vivot (@palaucanvivot), graciously hosted by Dr. Pedro de Montaner, Count of Zavellá, whose family has stewarded the 14th-century palacio for twenty-one generations.
The evening closed around the table at Petit La Sang (@petit_lasang) helmed by Swedish sommelier and restauranteur Lukas Lundgren, where Mallorcan hospitality revealed itself through taste, gesture, and care. Each plate felt considered, each glass of artisan wine carried the character of the land, and the evening unfolded with the quiet generosity of people who know how to make others feel held.
This was the beginning.
A journey through craft, ritual, and love — the one without ego.
lov. x XTANT

lov.YATRA | Day 1
The inaugural edition of lov.YATRA opened in Mallorca, bringing together thought leaders, artists, artisans, and cultural voices to explore textile heritage, craftsmanship, and the wisdom carried through making.
The opening ceremony, followed by a private preview of XTANT (@_xtant_), the annual textile art festival that gathers artisans, craftswomen, makers, and thinkers from cultures around the world through the shared language of textiles. For lov., this peaceful co-flourishing is made visible: traditions sustained through exchange, creativity becoming a bridge between people, and coexistence expressed through craft, beauty, and human connection.
At the centre of the evening was lov.gallery, a space within XTANT where art and textile traditions meet contemporary voices, making coexistence visible through material, memory, and form. Curated by founder of XTANT, Kavita Parmar (@kavitaparmar), the exhibition brought together works by Greek artist, Irini Gonou (@irini.gonou) and textile students from Shenkar College of Engineering, Design and Art (@shenkar_college @textile_shenkar), Yara Shehady (@yarashehady) and Ariel Ben Moshe, inviting us to encounter making as ritual, beauty as connection, and craft as a living language between cultures.
All of this unfolded within the quiet grandeur of Can Vivot (@palaucanvivot), graciously hosted by Dr. Pedro de Montaner, Count of Zavellá, whose family has stewarded the 14th-century palacio for twenty-one generations.
The evening closed around the table at Petit La Sang (@petit_lasang) helmed by Swedish sommelier and restauranteur Lukas Lundgren, where Mallorcan hospitality revealed itself through taste, gesture, and care. Each plate felt considered, each glass of artisan wine carried the character of the land, and the evening unfolded with the quiet generosity of people who know how to make others feel held.
This was the beginning.
A journey through craft, ritual, and love — the one without ego.
lov. x XTANT

craft dump — a week in objects 🌀🌞🪢
@lov.foundation and @_xtant_ welcomed me into the inaugural lov.YATRA— a gathering rooted in textile heritage, living craft traditions, and the intelligence carried through the hands of makers.
One conversation that has stayed with me came from Satish Kumar, who spoke about beauty as something essential to human flourishing— not superficial, but sustaining. In a world organized around extraction and efficiency, beauty asks us to slow down, to care, to remain in relationship with life itself.
craft dump — a week in objects 🌀🌞🪢
@lov.foundation and @_xtant_ welcomed me into the inaugural lov.YATRA— a gathering rooted in textile heritage, living craft traditions, and the intelligence carried through the hands of makers.
One conversation that has stayed with me came from Satish Kumar, who spoke about beauty as something essential to human flourishing— not superficial, but sustaining. In a world organized around extraction and efficiency, beauty asks us to slow down, to care, to remain in relationship with life itself.

craft dump — a week in objects 🌀🌞🪢
@lov.foundation and @_xtant_ welcomed me into the inaugural lov.YATRA— a gathering rooted in textile heritage, living craft traditions, and the intelligence carried through the hands of makers.
One conversation that has stayed with me came from Satish Kumar, who spoke about beauty as something essential to human flourishing— not superficial, but sustaining. In a world organized around extraction and efficiency, beauty asks us to slow down, to care, to remain in relationship with life itself.

craft dump — a week in objects 🌀🌞🪢
@lov.foundation and @_xtant_ welcomed me into the inaugural lov.YATRA— a gathering rooted in textile heritage, living craft traditions, and the intelligence carried through the hands of makers.
One conversation that has stayed with me came from Satish Kumar, who spoke about beauty as something essential to human flourishing— not superficial, but sustaining. In a world organized around extraction and efficiency, beauty asks us to slow down, to care, to remain in relationship with life itself.

craft dump — a week in objects 🌀🌞🪢
@lov.foundation and @_xtant_ welcomed me into the inaugural lov.YATRA— a gathering rooted in textile heritage, living craft traditions, and the intelligence carried through the hands of makers.
One conversation that has stayed with me came from Satish Kumar, who spoke about beauty as something essential to human flourishing— not superficial, but sustaining. In a world organized around extraction and efficiency, beauty asks us to slow down, to care, to remain in relationship with life itself.

craft dump — a week in objects 🌀🌞🪢
@lov.foundation and @_xtant_ welcomed me into the inaugural lov.YATRA— a gathering rooted in textile heritage, living craft traditions, and the intelligence carried through the hands of makers.
One conversation that has stayed with me came from Satish Kumar, who spoke about beauty as something essential to human flourishing— not superficial, but sustaining. In a world organized around extraction and efficiency, beauty asks us to slow down, to care, to remain in relationship with life itself.

craft dump — a week in objects 🌀🌞🪢
@lov.foundation and @_xtant_ welcomed me into the inaugural lov.YATRA— a gathering rooted in textile heritage, living craft traditions, and the intelligence carried through the hands of makers.
One conversation that has stayed with me came from Satish Kumar, who spoke about beauty as something essential to human flourishing— not superficial, but sustaining. In a world organized around extraction and efficiency, beauty asks us to slow down, to care, to remain in relationship with life itself.

craft dump — a week in objects 🌀🌞🪢
@lov.foundation and @_xtant_ welcomed me into the inaugural lov.YATRA— a gathering rooted in textile heritage, living craft traditions, and the intelligence carried through the hands of makers.
One conversation that has stayed with me came from Satish Kumar, who spoke about beauty as something essential to human flourishing— not superficial, but sustaining. In a world organized around extraction and efficiency, beauty asks us to slow down, to care, to remain in relationship with life itself.
craft dump — a week in objects 🌀🌞🪢
@lov.foundation and @_xtant_ welcomed me into the inaugural lov.YATRA— a gathering rooted in textile heritage, living craft traditions, and the intelligence carried through the hands of makers.
One conversation that has stayed with me came from Satish Kumar, who spoke about beauty as something essential to human flourishing— not superficial, but sustaining. In a world organized around extraction and efficiency, beauty asks us to slow down, to care, to remain in relationship with life itself.

Magic happened at XTANT 2026 NOMAD in Palma when more than 90 artists and artisans share their textile traditions and built future dreams. What an inspiration at this impressive cultural heritage palace Can Vivot. So grateful and proud to be part of this fantastic tribe. Thank you all for your energy and love, ❤️ thank you @kavitaparmar #handmade #slowliving #studiostege #culturalheritage #futuretraditions

Magic happened at XTANT 2026 NOMAD in Palma when more than 90 artists and artisans share their textile traditions and built future dreams. What an inspiration at this impressive cultural heritage palace Can Vivot. So grateful and proud to be part of this fantastic tribe. Thank you all for your energy and love, ❤️ thank you @kavitaparmar #handmade #slowliving #studiostege #culturalheritage #futuretraditions

Magic happened at XTANT 2026 NOMAD in Palma when more than 90 artists and artisans share their textile traditions and built future dreams. What an inspiration at this impressive cultural heritage palace Can Vivot. So grateful and proud to be part of this fantastic tribe. Thank you all for your energy and love, ❤️ thank you @kavitaparmar #handmade #slowliving #studiostege #culturalheritage #futuretraditions

Magic happened at XTANT 2026 NOMAD in Palma when more than 90 artists and artisans share their textile traditions and built future dreams. What an inspiration at this impressive cultural heritage palace Can Vivot. So grateful and proud to be part of this fantastic tribe. Thank you all for your energy and love, ❤️ thank you @kavitaparmar #handmade #slowliving #studiostege #culturalheritage #futuretraditions

Magic happened at XTANT 2026 NOMAD in Palma when more than 90 artists and artisans share their textile traditions and built future dreams. What an inspiration at this impressive cultural heritage palace Can Vivot. So grateful and proud to be part of this fantastic tribe. Thank you all for your energy and love, ❤️ thank you @kavitaparmar #handmade #slowliving #studiostege #culturalheritage #futuretraditions

Magic happened at XTANT 2026 NOMAD in Palma when more than 90 artists and artisans share their textile traditions and built future dreams. What an inspiration at this impressive cultural heritage palace Can Vivot. So grateful and proud to be part of this fantastic tribe. Thank you all for your energy and love, ❤️ thank you @kavitaparmar #handmade #slowliving #studiostege #culturalheritage #futuretraditions

Magic happened at XTANT 2026 NOMAD in Palma when more than 90 artists and artisans share their textile traditions and built future dreams. What an inspiration at this impressive cultural heritage palace Can Vivot. So grateful and proud to be part of this fantastic tribe. Thank you all for your energy and love, ❤️ thank you @kavitaparmar #handmade #slowliving #studiostege #culturalheritage #futuretraditions

Magic happened at XTANT 2026 NOMAD in Palma when more than 90 artists and artisans share their textile traditions and built future dreams. What an inspiration at this impressive cultural heritage palace Can Vivot. So grateful and proud to be part of this fantastic tribe. Thank you all for your energy and love, ❤️ thank you @kavitaparmar #handmade #slowliving #studiostege #culturalheritage #futuretraditions

Magic happened at XTANT 2026 NOMAD in Palma when more than 90 artists and artisans share their textile traditions and built future dreams. What an inspiration at this impressive cultural heritage palace Can Vivot. So grateful and proud to be part of this fantastic tribe. Thank you all for your energy and love, ❤️ thank you @kavitaparmar #handmade #slowliving #studiostege #culturalheritage #futuretraditions

Magic happened at XTANT 2026 NOMAD in Palma when more than 90 artists and artisans share their textile traditions and built future dreams. What an inspiration at this impressive cultural heritage palace Can Vivot. So grateful and proud to be part of this fantastic tribe. Thank you all for your energy and love, ❤️ thank you @kavitaparmar #handmade #slowliving #studiostege #culturalheritage #futuretraditions

Magic happened at XTANT 2026 NOMAD in Palma when more than 90 artists and artisans share their textile traditions and built future dreams. What an inspiration at this impressive cultural heritage palace Can Vivot. So grateful and proud to be part of this fantastic tribe. Thank you all for your energy and love, ❤️ thank you @kavitaparmar #handmade #slowliving #studiostege #culturalheritage #futuretraditions

Magic happened at XTANT 2026 NOMAD in Palma when more than 90 artists and artisans share their textile traditions and built future dreams. What an inspiration at this impressive cultural heritage palace Can Vivot. So grateful and proud to be part of this fantastic tribe. Thank you all for your energy and love, ❤️ thank you @kavitaparmar #handmade #slowliving #studiostege #culturalheritage #futuretraditions

Magic happened at XTANT 2026 NOMAD in Palma when more than 90 artists and artisans share their textile traditions and built future dreams. What an inspiration at this impressive cultural heritage palace Can Vivot. So grateful and proud to be part of this fantastic tribe. Thank you all for your energy and love, ❤️ thank you @kavitaparmar #handmade #slowliving #studiostege #culturalheritage #futuretraditions

Magic happened at XTANT 2026 NOMAD in Palma when more than 90 artists and artisans share their textile traditions and built future dreams. What an inspiration at this impressive cultural heritage palace Can Vivot. So grateful and proud to be part of this fantastic tribe. Thank you all for your energy and love, ❤️ thank you @kavitaparmar #handmade #slowliving #studiostege #culturalheritage #futuretraditions

Magic happened at XTANT 2026 NOMAD in Palma when more than 90 artists and artisans share their textile traditions and built future dreams. What an inspiration at this impressive cultural heritage palace Can Vivot. So grateful and proud to be part of this fantastic tribe. Thank you all for your energy and love, ❤️ thank you @kavitaparmar #handmade #slowliving #studiostege #culturalheritage #futuretraditions

Magic happened at XTANT 2026 NOMAD in Palma when more than 90 artists and artisans share their textile traditions and built future dreams. What an inspiration at this impressive cultural heritage palace Can Vivot. So grateful and proud to be part of this fantastic tribe. Thank you all for your energy and love, ❤️ thank you @kavitaparmar #handmade #slowliving #studiostege #culturalheritage #futuretraditions

Magic happened at XTANT 2026 NOMAD in Palma when more than 90 artists and artisans share their textile traditions and built future dreams. What an inspiration at this impressive cultural heritage palace Can Vivot. So grateful and proud to be part of this fantastic tribe. Thank you all for your energy and love, ❤️ thank you @kavitaparmar #handmade #slowliving #studiostege #culturalheritage #futuretraditions

Magic happened at XTANT 2026 NOMAD in Palma when more than 90 artists and artisans share their textile traditions and built future dreams. What an inspiration at this impressive cultural heritage palace Can Vivot. So grateful and proud to be part of this fantastic tribe. Thank you all for your energy and love, ❤️ thank you @kavitaparmar #handmade #slowliving #studiostege #culturalheritage #futuretraditions
Magic happened at XTANT 2026 NOMAD in Palma when more than 90 artists and artisans share their textile traditions and built future dreams. What an inspiration at this impressive cultural heritage palace Can Vivot. So grateful and proud to be part of this fantastic tribe. Thank you all for your energy and love, ❤️ thank you @kavitaparmar #handmade #slowliving #studiostege #culturalheritage #futuretraditions

Magic happened at XTANT 2026 NOMAD in Palma when more than 90 artists and artisans share their textile traditions and built future dreams. What an inspiration at this impressive cultural heritage palace Can Vivot. So grateful and proud to be part of this fantastic tribe. Thank you all for your energy and love, ❤️ thank you @kavitaparmar #handmade #slowliving #studiostege #culturalheritage #futuretraditions

So proud and honored to be part of this community that is @_xtant_ It is more than an anual gathering of heritage textile artisans/artists, it is the pursuit of a different socio-political model based on respect and appreciation of all beings, cultures and lands. A celebration of all its wonders. Thank you @kavitaparmar for dreaming it and bringing together so many other hearts and hands on this journey. Thank you to all those hearts and hands ! And thank you to all those who came to share their time with us at the fabulous @palaucanvivot. Until next time
.
As me and my phone have a distant relationship (even more so during these days) all pics are by the beautiful eyes of: @emmacassi_art @monikaczor77 @belen_atienza_molina @danielaykl @anujsharmanid

So proud and honored to be part of this community that is @_xtant_ It is more than an anual gathering of heritage textile artisans/artists, it is the pursuit of a different socio-political model based on respect and appreciation of all beings, cultures and lands. A celebration of all its wonders. Thank you @kavitaparmar for dreaming it and bringing together so many other hearts and hands on this journey. Thank you to all those hearts and hands ! And thank you to all those who came to share their time with us at the fabulous @palaucanvivot. Until next time
.
As me and my phone have a distant relationship (even more so during these days) all pics are by the beautiful eyes of: @emmacassi_art @monikaczor77 @belen_atienza_molina @danielaykl @anujsharmanid

So proud and honored to be part of this community that is @_xtant_ It is more than an anual gathering of heritage textile artisans/artists, it is the pursuit of a different socio-political model based on respect and appreciation of all beings, cultures and lands. A celebration of all its wonders. Thank you @kavitaparmar for dreaming it and bringing together so many other hearts and hands on this journey. Thank you to all those hearts and hands ! And thank you to all those who came to share their time with us at the fabulous @palaucanvivot. Until next time
.
As me and my phone have a distant relationship (even more so during these days) all pics are by the beautiful eyes of: @emmacassi_art @monikaczor77 @belen_atienza_molina @danielaykl @anujsharmanid

So proud and honored to be part of this community that is @_xtant_ It is more than an anual gathering of heritage textile artisans/artists, it is the pursuit of a different socio-political model based on respect and appreciation of all beings, cultures and lands. A celebration of all its wonders. Thank you @kavitaparmar for dreaming it and bringing together so many other hearts and hands on this journey. Thank you to all those hearts and hands ! And thank you to all those who came to share their time with us at the fabulous @palaucanvivot. Until next time
.
As me and my phone have a distant relationship (even more so during these days) all pics are by the beautiful eyes of: @emmacassi_art @monikaczor77 @belen_atienza_molina @danielaykl @anujsharmanid

So proud and honored to be part of this community that is @_xtant_ It is more than an anual gathering of heritage textile artisans/artists, it is the pursuit of a different socio-political model based on respect and appreciation of all beings, cultures and lands. A celebration of all its wonders. Thank you @kavitaparmar for dreaming it and bringing together so many other hearts and hands on this journey. Thank you to all those hearts and hands ! And thank you to all those who came to share their time with us at the fabulous @palaucanvivot. Until next time
.
As me and my phone have a distant relationship (even more so during these days) all pics are by the beautiful eyes of: @emmacassi_art @monikaczor77 @belen_atienza_molina @danielaykl @anujsharmanid

So proud and honored to be part of this community that is @_xtant_ It is more than an anual gathering of heritage textile artisans/artists, it is the pursuit of a different socio-political model based on respect and appreciation of all beings, cultures and lands. A celebration of all its wonders. Thank you @kavitaparmar for dreaming it and bringing together so many other hearts and hands on this journey. Thank you to all those hearts and hands ! And thank you to all those who came to share their time with us at the fabulous @palaucanvivot. Until next time
.
As me and my phone have a distant relationship (even more so during these days) all pics are by the beautiful eyes of: @emmacassi_art @monikaczor77 @belen_atienza_molina @danielaykl @anujsharmanid

So proud and honored to be part of this community that is @_xtant_ It is more than an anual gathering of heritage textile artisans/artists, it is the pursuit of a different socio-political model based on respect and appreciation of all beings, cultures and lands. A celebration of all its wonders. Thank you @kavitaparmar for dreaming it and bringing together so many other hearts and hands on this journey. Thank you to all those hearts and hands ! And thank you to all those who came to share their time with us at the fabulous @palaucanvivot. Until next time
.
As me and my phone have a distant relationship (even more so during these days) all pics are by the beautiful eyes of: @emmacassi_art @monikaczor77 @belen_atienza_molina @danielaykl @anujsharmanid

So proud and honored to be part of this community that is @_xtant_ It is more than an anual gathering of heritage textile artisans/artists, it is the pursuit of a different socio-political model based on respect and appreciation of all beings, cultures and lands. A celebration of all its wonders. Thank you @kavitaparmar for dreaming it and bringing together so many other hearts and hands on this journey. Thank you to all those hearts and hands ! And thank you to all those who came to share their time with us at the fabulous @palaucanvivot. Until next time
.
As me and my phone have a distant relationship (even more so during these days) all pics are by the beautiful eyes of: @emmacassi_art @monikaczor77 @belen_atienza_molina @danielaykl @anujsharmanid

So proud and honored to be part of this community that is @_xtant_ It is more than an anual gathering of heritage textile artisans/artists, it is the pursuit of a different socio-political model based on respect and appreciation of all beings, cultures and lands. A celebration of all its wonders. Thank you @kavitaparmar for dreaming it and bringing together so many other hearts and hands on this journey. Thank you to all those hearts and hands ! And thank you to all those who came to share their time with us at the fabulous @palaucanvivot. Until next time
.
As me and my phone have a distant relationship (even more so during these days) all pics are by the beautiful eyes of: @emmacassi_art @monikaczor77 @belen_atienza_molina @danielaykl @anujsharmanid

So proud and honored to be part of this community that is @_xtant_ It is more than an anual gathering of heritage textile artisans/artists, it is the pursuit of a different socio-political model based on respect and appreciation of all beings, cultures and lands. A celebration of all its wonders. Thank you @kavitaparmar for dreaming it and bringing together so many other hearts and hands on this journey. Thank you to all those hearts and hands ! And thank you to all those who came to share their time with us at the fabulous @palaucanvivot. Until next time
.
As me and my phone have a distant relationship (even more so during these days) all pics are by the beautiful eyes of: @emmacassi_art @monikaczor77 @belen_atienza_molina @danielaykl @anujsharmanid

So proud and honored to be part of this community that is @_xtant_ It is more than an anual gathering of heritage textile artisans/artists, it is the pursuit of a different socio-political model based on respect and appreciation of all beings, cultures and lands. A celebration of all its wonders. Thank you @kavitaparmar for dreaming it and bringing together so many other hearts and hands on this journey. Thank you to all those hearts and hands ! And thank you to all those who came to share their time with us at the fabulous @palaucanvivot. Until next time
.
As me and my phone have a distant relationship (even more so during these days) all pics are by the beautiful eyes of: @emmacassi_art @monikaczor77 @belen_atienza_molina @danielaykl @anujsharmanid

So proud and honored to be part of this community that is @_xtant_ It is more than an anual gathering of heritage textile artisans/artists, it is the pursuit of a different socio-political model based on respect and appreciation of all beings, cultures and lands. A celebration of all its wonders. Thank you @kavitaparmar for dreaming it and bringing together so many other hearts and hands on this journey. Thank you to all those hearts and hands ! And thank you to all those who came to share their time with us at the fabulous @palaucanvivot. Until next time
.
As me and my phone have a distant relationship (even more so during these days) all pics are by the beautiful eyes of: @emmacassi_art @monikaczor77 @belen_atienza_molina @danielaykl @anujsharmanid

So proud and honored to be part of this community that is @_xtant_ It is more than an anual gathering of heritage textile artisans/artists, it is the pursuit of a different socio-political model based on respect and appreciation of all beings, cultures and lands. A celebration of all its wonders. Thank you @kavitaparmar for dreaming it and bringing together so many other hearts and hands on this journey. Thank you to all those hearts and hands ! And thank you to all those who came to share their time with us at the fabulous @palaucanvivot. Until next time
.
As me and my phone have a distant relationship (even more so during these days) all pics are by the beautiful eyes of: @emmacassi_art @monikaczor77 @belen_atienza_molina @danielaykl @anujsharmanid

So proud and honored to be part of this community that is @_xtant_ It is more than an anual gathering of heritage textile artisans/artists, it is the pursuit of a different socio-political model based on respect and appreciation of all beings, cultures and lands. A celebration of all its wonders. Thank you @kavitaparmar for dreaming it and bringing together so many other hearts and hands on this journey. Thank you to all those hearts and hands ! And thank you to all those who came to share their time with us at the fabulous @palaucanvivot. Until next time
.
As me and my phone have a distant relationship (even more so during these days) all pics are by the beautiful eyes of: @emmacassi_art @monikaczor77 @belen_atienza_molina @danielaykl @anujsharmanid

So proud and honored to be part of this community that is @_xtant_ It is more than an anual gathering of heritage textile artisans/artists, it is the pursuit of a different socio-political model based on respect and appreciation of all beings, cultures and lands. A celebration of all its wonders. Thank you @kavitaparmar for dreaming it and bringing together so many other hearts and hands on this journey. Thank you to all those hearts and hands ! And thank you to all those who came to share their time with us at the fabulous @palaucanvivot. Until next time
.
As me and my phone have a distant relationship (even more so during these days) all pics are by the beautiful eyes of: @emmacassi_art @monikaczor77 @belen_atienza_molina @danielaykl @anujsharmanid

Mallorca with my favorite craft uncles from Kutch 💙
These folks have done so much to put their craft traditions on the global map— living culture bearers and the warmest humans. We’re all here for @_xtant_, a global gathering celebrating heritage textiles and centering the makers themselves.
I still remember attending for the first time two years ago, when @vankar_vishram_valji stopped me to say the outfit I was wearing had been spun and woven by him. Later that day @abdullahkhatri.sidrcraft gave me my first masterclass in bandhani dyeing.
That’s the kind of fashion world I believe in.
Big love to @lov.foundation for bringing me back this year, and to @mateatme for capturing these moments through Palma’s windy streets 🌀
Mallorca with my favorite craft uncles from Kutch 💙
These folks have done so much to put their craft traditions on the global map— living culture bearers and the warmest humans. We’re all here for @_xtant_, a global gathering celebrating heritage textiles and centering the makers themselves.
I still remember attending for the first time two years ago, when @vankar_vishram_valji stopped me to say the outfit I was wearing had been spun and woven by him. Later that day @abdullahkhatri.sidrcraft gave me my first masterclass in bandhani dyeing.
That’s the kind of fashion world I believe in.
Big love to @lov.foundation for bringing me back this year, and to @mateatme for capturing these moments through Palma’s windy streets 🌀

Mallorca with my favorite craft uncles from Kutch 💙
These folks have done so much to put their craft traditions on the global map— living culture bearers and the warmest humans. We’re all here for @_xtant_, a global gathering celebrating heritage textiles and centering the makers themselves.
I still remember attending for the first time two years ago, when @vankar_vishram_valji stopped me to say the outfit I was wearing had been spun and woven by him. Later that day @abdullahkhatri.sidrcraft gave me my first masterclass in bandhani dyeing.
That’s the kind of fashion world I believe in.
Big love to @lov.foundation for bringing me back this year, and to @mateatme for capturing these moments through Palma’s windy streets 🌀

Mallorca with my favorite craft uncles from Kutch 💙
These folks have done so much to put their craft traditions on the global map— living culture bearers and the warmest humans. We’re all here for @_xtant_, a global gathering celebrating heritage textiles and centering the makers themselves.
I still remember attending for the first time two years ago, when @vankar_vishram_valji stopped me to say the outfit I was wearing had been spun and woven by him. Later that day @abdullahkhatri.sidrcraft gave me my first masterclass in bandhani dyeing.
That’s the kind of fashion world I believe in.
Big love to @lov.foundation for bringing me back this year, and to @mateatme for capturing these moments through Palma’s windy streets 🌀

Mallorca with my favorite craft uncles from Kutch 💙
These folks have done so much to put their craft traditions on the global map— living culture bearers and the warmest humans. We’re all here for @_xtant_, a global gathering celebrating heritage textiles and centering the makers themselves.
I still remember attending for the first time two years ago, when @vankar_vishram_valji stopped me to say the outfit I was wearing had been spun and woven by him. Later that day @abdullahkhatri.sidrcraft gave me my first masterclass in bandhani dyeing.
That’s the kind of fashion world I believe in.
Big love to @lov.foundation for bringing me back this year, and to @mateatme for capturing these moments through Palma’s windy streets 🌀

Mallorca with my favorite craft uncles from Kutch 💙
These folks have done so much to put their craft traditions on the global map— living culture bearers and the warmest humans. We’re all here for @_xtant_, a global gathering celebrating heritage textiles and centering the makers themselves.
I still remember attending for the first time two years ago, when @vankar_vishram_valji stopped me to say the outfit I was wearing had been spun and woven by him. Later that day @abdullahkhatri.sidrcraft gave me my first masterclass in bandhani dyeing.
That’s the kind of fashion world I believe in.
Big love to @lov.foundation for bringing me back this year, and to @mateatme for capturing these moments through Palma’s windy streets 🌀
lov. x XTANT present — lov.YATRA, an Act of Remembering in Mallorca.
At lov., we believe we don’t invent anything new — we return our attention to something essential we’ve always known, but somehow forgot.
This is not a metaphor, but an invitation to remember yourself by reconnecting with the ancient wisdom of crafts, textiles, and nature that flows in your blood, passed down through your ancestors.
We begin the journey the only way we know how: with ritual, with an open heart.
Is your heart open?
Thank you MAUA Chocolatier (@maua_chocolates) for creating our first initiation ritual for 2026 lov.YATRA.
Video: Anna Sydorchik (@meseptember)
A few impressions of my first days @_xtant_
As a fiber artist it rarely happens that the stage is built just for those creating art using traditional crafts. For the longest time textiles have been seen merely as the little stepsister offine arts, but slowly the world is waking up to the fact that art cannot be put into a straight jacket, and these age old distinctions are redundant.
Thank you @kavitaparmar for bringing together such an thoughtfully crafted event highlighting the art within craft, for pushing forward this important dialogue, and for creating community between those who are creating in solitude in their studios all over the world.
It’s a little utopian world that I see growing vastly 🤌🏽
#XTANT #palma #textileart #fiberartist

Installation of 'Vriendje XXIX & XXX' @_xtant_ shown from 'the other side'
Photo credits: @xavierdeshoulieres 💜
To be seen until 12th of May at XTANT @palaucanvivot

Installation of 'Vriendje XXIX & XXX' @_xtant_ shown from 'the other side'
Photo credits: @xavierdeshoulieres 💜
To be seen until 12th of May at XTANT @palaucanvivot

Installation of 'Vriendje XXIX & XXX' @_xtant_ shown from 'the other side'
Photo credits: @xavierdeshoulieres 💜
To be seen until 12th of May at XTANT @palaucanvivot

Installation of 'Vriendje XXIX & XXX' @_xtant_ shown from 'the other side'
Photo credits: @xavierdeshoulieres 💜
To be seen until 12th of May at XTANT @palaucanvivot

Installation of 'Vriendje XXIX & XXX' @_xtant_ shown from 'the other side'
Photo credits: @xavierdeshoulieres 💜
To be seen until 12th of May at XTANT @palaucanvivot

Installation of 'Vriendje XXIX & XXX' @_xtant_ shown from 'the other side'
Photo credits: @xavierdeshoulieres 💜
To be seen until 12th of May at XTANT @palaucanvivot
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