Le Bateau de Larmes (The Boat of Tears) (2004) unfolds as a meditation on migration and memory. A weathered wooden boat its hull bearing traces of red paint, rests at the center of the space as if salvaged from a long voyage. Atop it rises an elaborate crown of glass "bead chains" and "teardrop" forms, arching in blue, gold, transparent, and smoky tones. Heavy pendants hang as if on the verge of slipping over the boat's edge.
The artist bought the vessel in Miami in 2001, that once carried Cuban refugees across the straits, embedding the work with real memories of migration, risk, hope, and danger. The boat becomes both vessel and witness, connecting personal journeys to wider political realities. Othoniel also draws inspiration from boatmen's festivals on the Loire River in France, translating elements of procession, coronation, and blessing into the arched crown structure of the giant bead chains.