“The horizon not as a distant line but as a continuously unfolding condition.” ZT Tosha June, 2026
- Title:Expanding Horizon (Realisation IV)
- Artist: ZT Tosha
- Year: 2026
- Materials:Fine black nylon tulle netting, high-tensile wall anchoring cables, low circular timber exhibition platform, heavy industrial steel chain-hoist, and adjustable steel anchoring tripod
- Dimensions: Variable; 4.0 meters diameter circular pedestal (textile wingspan extending 7.2 meters across the back walls, reaching a height of 3.8 meters)
In Expanding Horizon (Realisation IV), ZT Tosha transforms a nearly immaterial textile membrane into a spatial field defined by tension, gravity, and extension. Suspended from a single elevated point and drawn outward across the gallery through a network of cables and industrial supports, the installation occupies the space less as an object than as a condition.
At the center of the work sits a four-meter circular platform, functioning as both anchor and point of origin. From this geometric core, a column of black nylon tulle rises toward the ceiling before expanding outward into a sweeping canopy that spans the rear architecture of the gallery. The resulting form appears suspended between opposing forces: upward pull and downward weight, expansion and collapse, structure and fragility.
The installation’s visual presence derives from the unusual properties of its material. The sheer black mesh continuously shifts between transparency and opacity, allowing the work to appear dense and architectural from one viewpoint, then nearly immaterial from another. Rather than enclosing space, the textile reveals it, transforming air, light, and distance into active sculptural elements.
[Gallery Ceiling Rigging / Chain Hoist]
|
| (Central Tension Point)
/\ v /\
/ \_________________*_________________/ \ <- 7.2m Sweeping Tulle Canopy
/ \
/ \
/ _________________________________ \
/ / \ \
| [4.0m Circular Wood Platform] |
\_________________________________/
Industrial chain hoists, anchoring cables, and structural supports remain fully visible. These components are not concealed mechanisms but integral parts of the work’s formal language. Their presence makes apparent the forces required to sustain the installation, exposing the relationship between material vulnerability and mechanical control. The work exists as a state of continuous negotiation between gravity and resistance.
While the installation draws upon traditions of Post-Minimalism and spatial abstraction, its primary concern is not the object itself but the generation of a horizon. Here, the horizon is not represented as an image or landscape. Instead, it emerges physically through the interaction of tension, scale, and suspension. The work proposes the horizon as an event: something continuously produced rather than passively observed.
Expanding Horizon (Realisation IV) invites viewers into an encounter with space in the process of becoming. Through a restrained material vocabulary and a precise orchestration of forces, Tosha creates an environment in which absence acquires form and emptiness becomes palpable. The result is a sculpture that operates not through mass, but through the activation of the space around it.