The initial experiments had him hooked, and then he just devoted himself to the whims of its waters and is now a full-time artist and founder of the Museum of Goa at Pilerne. “When the waves break, the surf runs under the sand. Most of the waves wet the sand that was wet before. Then a big wave goes ahead and wets new sand. Creativity in art and writing is about wetting this new sand,” he says. It is why he constantly aspires to search, find, and make new stories about the ocean. If created at the oceanfront, even better. His methods involve choreographing armies. Armies of fishermen, mussel shells, plastic bottles, soil—an upcoming idea is to make an island from the soil of every country and dissolve borders, when the soil of Israel, for instance, will mix with the soil of Saudi Arabia. In another experiment, he wants to create floating sculptures from wood, “which I will take in a boat to the middle of the ocean and throw them in, and then they will find their own coast”. And their own masters.