ZT TOSHA : The Inherited Throne

  • Title: The Inherited Throne
  • Artist: ZT Tosha
  • Year: 2026
  • Proposed Medium: Molded FRP shell over bent aluminum frame, stainless steel connections, hidden flange system, matte black gelcoat finish
  • Proposed Dimensions: 600 × 300 × 320 cm (L × W × H)
  • Status:Monumental sculpture project currently in development; realized as a clay maquette, technical design, and digital visualization.
In contemporary culture, power increasingly appears detached from those who supposedly wield it. Governments change, institutions rebrand, ideologies collapse and reform, yet the structures that organize everyday life remain remarkably stable. We continue to speak inherited languages, navigate inherited cities, observe inherited calendars, and evaluate the world through systems of value that predate our existence. The persistence of these frameworks raises a fundamental question: if authority no longer resides in a sovereign figure, where exactly does it reside? The Inherited Throne emerged from this question. Conceived as a monumental sculpture intended for both indoor and outdoor presentation, the work currently exists as a developed proposal, a physical clay maquette constructed at proportional scale, and a series of digital visualizations derived from that model. The images presented here are not photographs of a completed monument. They are projections of a future realization, developed to communicate the spatial, material, and conceptual presence of the work at its intended scale. The distinction matters. The project occupies a position between idea and object, between conception and construction. It exists simultaneously as sculpture, architectural proposition, engineering problem, philosophical inquiry, and public artwork awaiting realization. Its current state reflects a process rather than a conclusion. At full scale, The Inherited Throne is envisioned as a six-meter-long sculptural structure whose matte-black surface absorbs light and destabilizes perception. Its form is organic and biomorphic: two bulbous masses connected by a twisted central bridge and supported by six distinct legs. From no single vantage point can the complete object be apprehended. It exceeds the viewer’s field of vision, frustrating any attempt at total comprehension. The title initially suggests a political reading. Thrones belong to monarchs. They signify sovereignty, hierarchy, legitimacy, and command. Yet the work immediately destabilizes this expectation. There is no seat. No backrest. No armrests. No ruler. No symbolic occupant. What remains is not the image of power but its architecture. The occupant has disappeared. The structure remains. This proposition extends beyond the sculpture itself and forms the basis of a larger body of work. On 21 June 2026, the publication of The Inherited Throne will expand these questions into book form, exploring the ways inherited systems of value, judgment, authority, and perception continue to shape contemporary life. The sculpture and the book should be understood as companion works. Neither illustrates the other. Both emerge from the same investigation. The sculpture proposes that contemporary authority operates not through visible rulers but through inherited frameworks that continue functioning regardless of belief. Language remains operative whether one agrees with its categories or not. Economic systems continue whether one trusts them or not. Social institutions persist whether one participates enthusiastically or reluctantly. Power survives the disappearance of its original justification. The throne, in this formulation, has outlived the king. The material strategy of the proposed monument reinforces this argument. Although many viewers assume monumental sculpture must be cast in bronze or carved from stone, The Inherited Throne is conceived as a lightweight assembled structure constructed from FRP and aluminum. The monument would appear monolithic while being fundamentally modular and hollow. This revelation forms the conceptual center of the work. The question is not whether FRP is inferior to bronze. The question is why viewers so often assume that it is. Why should solidity be considered more serious than assembly? Why should permanence be considered more valuable than adaptability? Why should bronze possess greater cultural legitimacy than contemporary composites? The answers lie not within the sculpture but within the inherited systems through which sculpture has historically been judged. In this sense, The Inherited Throne is not only about political inheritance. It is also about aesthetic inheritance. It asks how authority becomes attached to forms, materials, institutions, and ideas before we consciously evaluate them. It reveals that cultural value often arrives disguised as personal preference. The work therefore functions as both sculpture and proposition. The monument remains unrealized, yet its questions are already active. Its physical construction awaits fabrication, institutional partnership, and investment, but its conceptual structure is already complete. The throne remains unoccupied. The structure remains operative. The project remains in formation. And it is precisely within that interval—between conception and realization, between imagination and construction—that The Inherited Throne begins its work. Project Status Note The Inherited Throne currently exists as a developed sculptural proposal, scale model, technical design, and digital visualization. The images presented on this website depict the intended full-scale realization of the work rather than a completed sculpture. A physical maquette has been produced in clay at the same proportions as the proposed monument. The photographic documentation of this model was subsequently developed into the visualizations shown here in order to communicate the spatial presence, scale, and material intention of the future work. The proposed dimensions of the sculpture are 600 × 300 × 320 cm. The material specification described in this text—molded FRP over an aluminum structure with concealed connections—represents the intended construction method for the full-scale realization. Conceived for both indoor and outdoor presentation, The Inherited Throne is currently seeking institutional partners, fabricators, patrons, and investors for production. The project forms part of a broader body of research that also includes the forthcoming book The Inherited Throne, scheduled for publication on 21 June 2026. The sculpture and the book develop the same central inquiry: how inherited systems of value, authority, and perception continue to shape contemporary life long after their original foundations have disappeared.

About the Book

The Inherited Throne is also the title of a companion book by ZT Tosha: The Inherited Throne: A Restoration of the Hierophant. While the sculpture poses questions of power and inheritance through physical form, the book traces these themes through the Great Pyramid, the Sumerian King List, and Gobekli Tepe—building a case for a lost civilization and its inheritance.

Formats & Release Dates:
eBook: Available now / releasing June 21, 2026
Paperback: Available from June 22, 2026

➡️ Purchase or pre-order your copy here