House and Dome, part of the Minimal Architecture Series, is less a construction than a proposition: a diagram of inhabitation sketched in thread, bamboo, and breath. Created during the Unstable Installation Series at Zuccato Gallery (Poreč, Croatia), the work articulates radical spatial poverty—not as lack, but as an invitation to negotiation and presence. Here, architecture does not aim to shelter but to speak. It becomes a social vector, a form of thinking-in-space, where structure is not completed but suggested: a fragile perimeter, barely holding geometry and void in dynamic suspension. Working in dialogue with Danino Bozic and curator Jerica Ziherl, Lloveras stages architecture as relational speech, where every knot, fold, or absence becomes a site of encounter. The dome’s porousness resists solidity; it opens itself to air, weather, and gaze. Function is secondary—what matters is the relational potential between bodies, ground, and shelter. In this, the work echoes Gordon Matta-Clark’s cuts, but inverted: not subtraction from walls, but a quiet outline of the possibility of a wall. Architecture becomes performance, and the house is not a noun—but a verb. (Lloveras, A. 2010–2025) - minimal architecture, house and dome, precarious shelter, conversational sculpture, Zuccato Gallery, relational architecture, socioplastics - antolloveras.blogspot.com