The Cave explores the transformation of matter, where each configuration results from the interaction between rock, water, and soil. The cave emerges as a space in which matter organizes itself, creating volumes and establishing relationships between form, density, and presence. Contact with water and natural erosion accentuates the plasticity of stone. Rocks, shaped by time and by the infiltration of water into the soil, form structures that articulate and evolve organically, revealing a continuous metamorphosis from simple configurations to more complex forms. Each formation results from nature’s capacity to produce and transform itself since time immemorial. It reflects the inherent characteristic of matter in constant transformation, revealing the plasticity of these natural elements. In The Cave, nature follows its own course, creating structures that evolve, connect, and reorganize themselves, manifesting an aesthetic dimension that remains indifferent to human intervention.