The love for nature isn’t discovered just through somebody who takes care of it, it becomes evident in whoever it protects. However, it turns vital in whoever it rescues it. 

This work of rescuing and recovering the nature materializes in the artwork of cuban artist Bernal. 

His gaze fused into the landscape perceives details that are almost invisible to the rest; in his beginnings, a spatial gaze, from the outside in, through his works inspired by satellite images, followed by a free fall from that vision to the ground, and the devastating consequences of what seemed beautiful from above. 

From the cause to the effect it produces, he converses with the object that tells him its story, giving him the opportunity to live again in each viewer, as an experience or recovery of some forgotten object in her attic.

He has participated in more than 100 personal and group exhibitions and international events.

His works have been exhibited in countries as far apart as France and Kuwait, Tunisia and Brazil, the United Arab Emirates and Japan, Mexico and Poland, Italy and Canada, Finland and China.

Many of his works are in private collections around the world, the National Museum of Fine Arts in Cuba, the Guayasamín Foundation in Ecuador, the Poplar Museum in Mexico.

In the years 1995 and 1998 three of his works were auctioned by the Christie’s house in New York.

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