José Carlos Losada

Matter and Memory

José Carlos Losada is an artisan and specialist in traditional coatings, with a career based on the respectful use of lime and gypsum: two essential materials in Cádiz architecture, due to their ability to breathe, reflect light, and endure over time. His work combines technical knowledge, aesthetic sensitivity, and commitment to preserving ancient knowledge. He collaborates closely with Gordillos Cal de Morón, a company that keeps alive an ancestral process of lime production in kilns of Andalusian origin, heir to Roman technical knowledge.

Artistic Manifesto

Coating a wall is also rebuilding a link with the history of the place. Losada’s artisanal practice is based on listening to the building: each layer he applies prolongs the life of the space without imposing foreign forms. In his language, there are no stridencies, only matter, texture, and silence. Through carefully worked mixtures, he manages to make architecture speak from the essential. His work is also a form of cultural resistance: preserving what connects with the environment and what, even today, makes sense.

Matter and Memory

José Carlos Losada is an artisan and specialist in traditional coatings, with a career based on the respectful use of lime and gypsum: two essential materials in Cádiz architecture, due to their ability to breathe, reflect light, and endure over time. His work combines technical knowledge, aesthetic sensitivity, and commitment to preserving ancient knowledge. He collaborates closely with Gordillos Cal de Morón, a company that keeps alive an ancestral process of lime production in kilns of Andalusian origin, heir to Roman technical knowledge.

Coating a wall is also rebuilding a link with the history of the place. Losada’s artisanal practice is based on listening to the building: each layer he applies prolongs the life of the space without imposing foreign forms. In his language, there are no stridencies, only matter, texture, and silence. Through carefully worked mixtures, he manages to make architecture speak from the essential. His work is also a form of cultural resistance: preserving what connects with the environment and what, even today, makes sense.

José Carlos Losada's Project at BYPILLOW Casa Gades (Cádiz)

At BYPILLOW Casa Gades, Losada has coated the headboards of the rooms with a mixture of lime and gypsum, a technique deeply rooted in the popular architecture of the south. For this intervention, he used plaster of Paris, chosen for its whiteness and its ability to capture the changing light of the surroundings. The result is sober and warm, contemporary and ancestral. Each surface integrates with the building as if it had always been there, reinforcing the connection between matter, memory, and place.
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