• Title: Lapis Lazuli
    • Artist: ZT Tosha
    • Year: 2026
    • Medium: oil on canvas, ultramarine pigment
    • Dimensions:Width 80 cm x Height 120 cm
    • Signed: Verso

    • Certificate of authenticity:
      Issued by the artist

ZT Tosha’s Lapis Lazuli belongs to a body of work that takes disassembly as both subject and method. The cycle, Assembler, Disassembled, unfolds across painting, sculpture, and installation as a sustained inquiry into the conditions under which selfhood fractures, reconstitutes, and fractures again — a process Tosha frames, with deliberate clinical detachment, as therapy. These are not illustrations of psychological states. They are material enactments of them.

Within this framework, Lapis Lazuli occupies a position of formal and emotional singularity. Where other works in the cycle foreground rupture — surfaces interrupted, forms suspended mid-collapse — this painting arrives at a different register entirely. A luminous ultramarine mass emerges from a deep, pressured ground, its edges held with a precision that reads less as resolution than as restraint. The form does not float. It endures.

The choice of ultramarine pigment is not incidental. Historically derived from the semiprecious stone lapis lazuli, the colour carries centuries of accumulated meaning: the sacred, the sovereign, the unreachable. In medieval and Renaissance painting it was reserved for the robes of the Virgin, the dome of heaven, figures set apart from ordinary matter. Tosha neither inherits this iconography uncritically nor dismisses it. Instead, he submits it to the same pressure that governs the entire cycle — stripping away narrative and devotional function until what remains is the pigment itself, raw in its intensity, demanding in its presence.

The painting engages a lineage of chromatic abstraction — Yves Klein’s monochromes, Mark Rothko’s late meditations on colour as psychological field, Ad Reinhardt’s insistence on painting as a discipline of reduction — yet Tosha’s concerns are distinct. Where Klein sought immateriality and Rothko pursued the dissolution of the self into light, Tosha is interested in what survives compression. Lapis Lazuli does not dissolve. It consolidates. The blue accumulates force rather than releasing it, and the darkened ground against which it asserts itself reads not as void but as resistance — an opposing pressure that makes the form’s persistence legible as something hard-won.

This is a painting about endurance under conditions that do not favour it. In the context of Assembler, Disassembled, where the governing logic is one of structural unmaking, Lapis Lazuli functions as the cycle’s still and luminous counterpoint — not a conclusion, but a pause of extraordinary density. What it holds, and how long, remains the work’s open question.