NO ONE SEES THEM LIKE WE DO
As part of Milano Design Week 2026, HEAD – Genève presented No One Sees Them Like We Do: Notes on Animal Interiors at Alcova, an exhibition imagined by the students of MAIA. Through six spatial narratives, the project explores the place of companion animals in our living spaces and opens up new perspectives on the relationship between humans and non-humans.
FEAST FOR RATS, presented by Matilde Arletti in collaboration with collective La Dalle (Angélique Kuenzle, Julie Chavaz)
Feast for Rats overturns the usual hierarchies of domestic space by inviting the rat to the table. An omnipresent yet systematically rejected species, the rat becomes a legitimate guest, participating in an act of shared conviviality. Composed of bread, seeds, and edible matter, the table shifts from a site of consumption to a space of encounter, intimacy, and negotiation. By placing the rat at the center of a shared ritual, the project carried out by the collective LA DALLE (Julie Chavaz and Angélique Kuenzle) and the student Matilde Arletti questions boundaries of disgust, hospitality, and equality, proposing sharing as a first gesture of interspecies recognition.
MEUW (Socius novus), presented by Jaemo Lee, Lisa Schober
Meuw speculates on a world in which companionship is no longer embodied by a living animal, but by an artefact that mimics presence, attachment, and response. Neither pet nor machine, the object proposes an alternative form of relation—one that requires no care, no habitat, and no responsibility toward a living being. Carried, touched, and kept close, it reacts through surface, weight, and affect. The project questions whether intimacy can be simulated without domination, and whether replacing the animal might reveal both a desire for connection and an inability to sustain coexistence with the living.
THERE ARE SEVEN DOVES DANCING IN MY HOME, presented by Hugo Maia Schmitt, Letizia Milone
Dancing Doves explores the relationship between humans and doves through sound, rhythm, and shared movement. The project revolves around a musical object placed within the space, activated by song, landings, and touch. Rather than training or controlling, the device creates a situation of co-presence where vibration becomes a shared ground. Through informal choreography and reciprocal listening, the project imagines a domestic interior shaped by the possibility of mutual complicity.
FROGS IN SEARCH OF WETLANDS, presented by Martino De Grandis, Ailyn Pieyre
Hidden Frog questions contemporary forms of fascination, capture, and display of living beings. In contrast to the attraction for exotic species kept behind glass, the project shifts attention toward local amphibians and their threatened habitats. It proposes discreet, water-based infrastructures, places for cooling, hydration, and refuge, embedded within domestic and agricultural landscapes. Rather than spectacular observation, Hidden Frog advocates for a non-invasive ethic of care, where coexistence is shaped by attention to fragile environments, silent maintenance, and the awareness of absence.
DOGS ARE NOT ONLY CREATURES, presented by Stéphanie Hemidi, Kim Sherin Schönauer, Jérémy Troilo
Wiggly Dogs explores the shared territory between humans and dogs through bodily movement and sensory perception. Conceived from a low, animal-centered point of view, the project transforms the domestic garden into a responsive landscape of objects, vegetation, cavities, and textures. Designed for running, sniffing, crawling, and play, the space fosters attunement between species. Drawing on a logic of becoming-with, the dog is considered not as a passive companion but as a co-actor of the environment. The outdoors becomes a site of encounter where shared exploration produces a situated, relational world.
SOME ANIMALS HIDE TO DIE, presented by Diana Escalante, Karol Szmigielski
Churches have long been places of devotion, but also temperate spaces offering shelter from the harshness of weather. Drawing on this dual role, the project imagines a place dedicated to death for animals. Conceived as a public architecture of gathering and mourning, it applies human practices of grief to animals without hierarchy or dramatization. After exploring play, care, sharing, and coexistence, this project addresses a rarely considered moment: stopping. Making space becomes a collective gesture—recognizing animal death as a shared experience, worthy of attention and equality.













