The Inherited Throne

ZT Tosha, 2026 — Monumental Sculpture Proposal

  • Artist: ZT Tosha
  • Year: 2026
  • Material: Steel-and-aluminum frame clad in layered bronze-resin composite, hidden flange system, hand-finished surface
  • Dimensions: 600 × 300 × 320 cm (L × W × H)
  • Weight: Estimate pending fabricator engineering review

Power in contemporary culture 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 speak inherited languages, navigate inherited cities, observe inherited calendars, and judge the world through inherited systems of value. If authority no longer resides in a sovereign figure, where does it reside? The Inherited Throne begins from that question.

The Work

Conceived for both indoor and outdoor presentation, The Inherited Throne is a monumental sculpture currently in development: a proportional clay maquette, complete technical design, and a set of digital visualizations built from that model. At full scale — 600 × 300 × 320 cm — it takes the form of two bulbous masses joined by a twisted central bridge, standing on six legs, clad in layered bronze-resin composite over a steel-and-aluminum frame. No single vantage point reveals the whole object; it exceeds the viewer’s field of vision and refuses total comprehension.

The title points toward sovereignty — thrones imply monarchs, hierarchy, command. The sculpture withholds all of it. There is no seat, no backrest, no ruler, no occupant. What remains is not the image of power but its architecture: the structure that power leaves behind once its original justification has gone. Language still functions whether or not one agrees with its categories. Economic systems persist whether or not one trusts them. The throne has outlived the king.

Material Argument

Monumental sculpture has always reached for bronze. Bronze means permanence, legitimacy, the unbroken authority of the monument tradition — a material that announces seriousness before a viewer reads a single word about the work. The Inherited Throne does not escape this. It reaches for bronze too.

But it reaches for it as a surface, not a structure. The sculpture is conceived as a steel-and-aluminum frame clad in layered bronze-resin composite — a finish that carries bronze’s full visual and cultural weight while being, underneath, something else entirely: lighter, assembled, contemporary. The monument appears to have the gravity of antiquity. It does not.

This is not a compromise. It is the argument made literal. A sculpture built to expose inherited authority as empty architecture — power surviving the disappearance of its original justification — cannot itself fully escape inheritance. Even here, even now, bronze is still the material that confers seriousness. The Inherited Throne does not pretend otherwise. It puts that inheritance on its own surface, in full view, and lets the contradiction stand: the work critiques the systems that grant authority to forms and materials, while visibly borrowing from the oldest and most loaded of them.

The throne, once again, has outlived the king — and even in critiquing the throne, one still reaches for its materials.

Companion Publication

The Inherited Throne: A Restoration of the Hierophant, a companion book by ZT Tosha, extends the same inquiry through the Great Pyramid, the Sumerian King List, and Göbekli Tepe, building a case for a lost civilization and its inheritance. The sculpture and the book are companion works developing one investigation, not illustrations of each other.

  • eBook: available June 21, 2026
  • Paperback: available from June 22, 2026

➡️ Purchase or pre-order your copy here

Project Status

The Inherited Throne currently exists as a developed proposal: a proportional clay maquette, completed technical design, and digital visualizations derived from that model — not a completed sculpture. The images depict the intended full-scale realization. The project is seeking institutional partners, fabricators, and patrons for production.