Ada Da Silva stands in a tradition of artists who treat sculpture not as an object to be observed but as a living dialogue between form, space, and feeling. A modernist sculptor with Cuban roots, she has built her practice around an elemental pursuit: to capture life’s movement in bronze, and in doing so, to touch the emotions of those who encounter her work. Her philosophy, simple and precise, guides every creation: “to invoke emotions through the expression of elegance and beauty.”

Da Silva’s work is not about realism. She avoids the literal, choosing instead to distill the human form into abstract gestures. Elongated figures, flowing lines, and sculptural planes speak of bodies and souls without ever needing to be exact replicas. What emerges is a sense of humanity revealed through suggestion, like fragments of song that carry meaning even when the words are gone. She builds these abstractions into something larger—forms that become metaphors for freedom, for curiosity, for the fluidity of life itself.
Born in Cuba, Da Silva grew up in a culture rich with rhythm, ritual, and resilience. These roots gave her a natural feel for movement and for the poetry of the body in space. Over time, her artistic path led her to bronze, a material that allows her to hold motion still while also suggesting its flow. Bronze carries weight and permanence, yet under her hands it seems to bend and breathe. She uses it to speak of emotions, of the human search for meaning, and of the elegance that lies hidden in ordinary experience.
One sculpture, in particular, reveals how Da Silva weaves these elements together: Curiosities.
Curiosities: A Dance of Sails and Seekers
Curiosities is not simply an object but a meditation. Cast in bronze, it presents two intertwined elements: sails and figures. The sails rise like great shapes of wind and fabric, their curves recalling the unpredictable nature of existence. They are metaphors for the unseen forces that move us—circumstance, time, chance—yet they also signal direction. In Da Silva’s hands, the sails remind us that we cannot control the winds, but we can steer the vessel.
Beside the sails stand three elongated, abstract figures. They are not literal bodies but ethereal presences—angelic in proportion, stripped of detail, and imbued with a quiet grace. These figures embody curiosity. They lean forward, as if listening. They reach outward, as if drawn by something just beyond. Their gestures capture that universal pull to explore, to question, to wonder what lies ahead.
Together, sails and figures form a dialogue: direction and discovery, structure and freedom, the forces that move us and the inner spark that keeps us seeking. The sculpture becomes a mirror for life’s journey, reminding us that uncertainty need not be feared. If embraced with openness and curiosity, it can be a source of beauty.
It is no accident that Curiosities won Best in Show at the Palm Beach Modern + Contemporary Art Fair in 2025. The piece has a quiet authority. It does not demand attention, but once seen, it lingers. It affirms Da Silva’s vision that abstraction can hold both mystery and clarity, both simplicity and depth.
Sculpting Philosophy into Form
What makes Da Silva’s work resonate is the way her philosophy translates into form. She believes beauty is not an ornament but a truth that connects us. By abstracting human forms, she avoids the specific and touches something more universal. Each line and curve becomes a gesture of feeling, a suggestion of motion. The result is sculpture that feels alive—not in the sense of realism, but in the sense of carrying breath, pulse, and spirit.
Her themes return often to nature and to the intangible qualities of existence: elegance, curiosity, freedom. Yet these themes are not lofty abstractions. They are rooted in lived experience. Her Cuban heritage, her exposure to different cultural rhythms, and her deep respect for the natural world all filter into her art. In this way, her sculptures are not removed from life but deeply connected to it.
A Celebration of Life and Emotion
Da Silva’s practice is, at heart, a celebration. She honors the fleeting and the eternal, the visible and the invisible, by blending them into works that invite reflection. In Curiosities, she captures the joy and fragility of exploration. In other works, she continues to explore how abstract human forms can express states of being—hope, longing, grace.
There is a clarity in her approach. She does not overcomplicate, nor does she rely on spectacle. Instead, she pares down to essential gestures, letting bronze carry the weight of meaning. That simplicity is what gives her work its quiet power.
The Path Ahead
Ada Da Silva continues to shape her career with the same openness that her sculptures suggest. Just as Curiosities asks, “What’s next?” her own path is guided by curiosity and the search for elegance in expression. Her Cuban birth, her modernist leanings, and her devotion to bronze converge in an art practice that is timeless in resonance yet deeply personal in origin.
For those who encounter her sculptures, the experience is less about decoding symbols and more about feeling. They are works to stand before, to circle slowly, to let impressions build. Like the sails in Curiosities, they shift with perspective, reminding us that art, like life, is always in motion.
Ada Da Silva’s work is a reminder that sculpture need not be static. It can move, breathe, and speak of the deepest truths—when shaped by a hand that sees elegance not as surface, but as essence.