- Title: The Inherited Throne
- Artist: ZT Tosha
- Year: 2026
- Medium: Inflatable sculpture: Black PVC coated polyester, TPU inner bladder, steel frame
- Dimensions: Variable; approximately approx. 480 × 360 × 250 cm (L × W × H)
THE OBJECT
The Inherited Throne is a large-scale inflatable sculpture constructed from black PVC coated polyester over an airtight TPU inner bladder, supported by an internal steel tube frame of 50mm and 40mm diameter tubes connected by steel clamps and anchored to the floor through expansion bolts and base plates. The outer skin is assembled from 28 fabric modules connected by heavy duty weatherproof zippers and heat sealed seams. The form is maintained by continuous air pressure of 2.0 to 2.5 kPa supplied by an electric blower positioned outside the exhibition space, connected through a discreet air tube fed through a gap or doorway. The total weight of the fabric construction is approximately 180 kg. Installation requires four people and between four and six hours. The sculpture stands 250 cm high, spans 480 cm in length and 360 cm in width. It is supported by four legs that arch from a central double-bodied mass, creating thresholds of negative space beneath and between the form. The surface is matte black, absorbing light rather than reflecting it. From any single position the complete form cannot be seen. It refuses a total image.THE TITLE
The title does not refer to monarchy. It refers to something more immediate and more universal. Every person arrives into a world already organized — by family structure, cultural assumption, institutional logic, inherited belief. Nobody chooses the corridors they first walk through. The throne is not a seat of individual power. It is the accumulated organizational logic of systems that preexist the individual and continue operating regardless of whether anyone consciously believes in them or not. It is inherited the way language is inherited, the way social behavior is inherited — completely, invisibly, before the capacity to question it exists. The word throne is deliberate. It carries the weight of authority, ceremony, and legitimacy. But in this work the throne is unoccupied. Nobody sits on it. Nobody controls it. Nobody owns it. What remains is the structure of authority without its occupant — the system persisting after the justification for it has disappeared.THE MATERIAL DECISION
The material is the argument. The process of making this work began with a clay maquette — small, solid, painted black. In that form the sculpture carried an immediate formal resemblance to the monumental inflatable tradition and more pointedly to the lineage of Louise Bourgeois, whose large scale organic forms — most recognizably Maman — occupy institutional space with genuine physical mass. Bronze. Permanent. Requiring maintenance, insurance, preservation. The accumulated weight of critical consensus arrives in the room before the viewer does and tells them what to feel. The decision to move from clay to compressed air was not formal. It was conceptual and it changes everything. The Inherited Throne at first encounter produces the same response as monumental bronze sculpture. Scale — yes. Darkness — yes. Dominance — yes. The inherited aesthetic criteria for seriousness are all present. Bigger than the viewer. Heavier in appearance. Black. But the object is air. Continuously pressurized air inside fabric, sustained by a machine outside the room that the viewer never sees. The moment that knowledge arrives — and it does arrive, through the exhibition text, through the visible seams, through the barely perceptible movement of the surface — something shifts. Not in the object. In the viewer. The initial reading becomes unstable. The sculpture suddenly feels less permanent, less serious, less worthy of the reverence the scale initially demanded. The viewer may instinctively resist this knowledge. Prefer the first reading. The comfortable inherited one. That resistance is the work’s core proposition made visible. We apply inherited criteria for what deserves admiration — mass, permanence, darkness, scale — so automatically that the revelation of air feels like a diminishment. But the diminishment is not in the object. It is in the judgment. In the unexamined assumption that heaviness equals seriousness and that air cannot sustain what bronze can. This is where The Inherited Throne makes its most precise argument. Not through representation. Through the gap between what the viewer sees and what the viewer knows, and through the instinct to protect the inherited reading against the arriving fact.THE SCULPTURE AS STANDALONE WORK
As a standalone sculpture outside the full spatial installation, The Inherited Throne requires specific conditions to function at full conceptual strength. It needs height. The ceiling must be sufficient to allow the form to breathe vertically without compression. It needs distance — enough floor space for the viewer to find their own position, to move around the form, to encounter it from multiple angles none of which resolve into a complete image. It needs the institutional frame of the white walled museum or gallery space, not as neutral background but as active conceptual context. The clean institutional container and the dark organic form are not simply figure and ground. They are the inherited system and the pressure that sustains it, made spatially visible. The work should not be over-lit. The matte black surface absorbs light and the form should be allowed to resist full visibility. What cannot be completely seen cannot be completely possessed. That is appropriate to its argument. The blower must remain outside the exhibition space. The air tube should enter discreetly. The maintenance infrastructure must be invisible because invisible maintenance is precisely what the work is about.PLACEMENT IN ART HISTORY
The Inherited Throne sits within a lineage of large scale sculpture that uses physical presence to produce psychological conditions rather than to represent ideas. But it departs from that lineage at a precise point. The monumental inflatable tradition — from Claes Oldenburg’s soft sculptures through to contemporary large scale inflatables — has generally worked with recognizable objects rendered in unexpected materials, producing meaning through the gap between the familiar subject and the unfamiliar substance. The humor and the critique operate through recognition. The Inherited Throne does not work this way. The form is not a recognizable object made strange. It is an ambiguous form that refuses categorization — simultaneously throne, organism, monument, architectural element, collapsed authority. The ambiguity is not decorative. It is the condition that allows the material revelation to function as a conceptual event rather than a formal surprise. The closer lineage is the institutional critique tradition — artists from Michael Asher through Andrea Fraser who have used the structures and behaviors of institutions as their primary material. The Inherited Throne belongs to this tradition in that it makes the invisible operational logic of authority visible through spatial and material experience. But where institutional critique has often operated through dematerialization or documentation, this work operates through overwhelming physical presence. It arrives looking like exactly what institutional spaces traditionally house and celebrate. Then it reveals itself as air. The relationship to Louise Bourgeois is worth stating precisely. Bourgeois worked with real weight — psychologically, materially, autobiographically. The spider is permanent and its permanence is meaningful. The Inherited Throne works with the appearance of that weight and its absence. Where Bourgeois asks you to confront what is genuinely present, Tosha asks you to confront what you assumed was present and discover it was not. The comparison is not about influence. It is about a precise conceptual distinction between real mass and maintained pressure, between intrinsic authority and inherited assumption. In the broader context of contemporary art practice, The Inherited Throne addresses questions that are genuinely urgent. About the persistence of systems after their justification disappears. About the invisible maintenance that sustains what appears permanent. About the inherited criteria through which we decide what deserves care, preservation, and admiration — and how rarely those criteria are examined. The sculpture does not answer these questions. It places the viewer inside them. That is the correct position for a work of this ambition.ARTIST
ZT Tosha is a Dutch-Yugoslavian multidisciplinary artist based in Amsterdam. His practice spans installation, sculpture, textile, sound, and theoretical writing, with a sustained investigation into the phenomenology of perception and the spatial grammar of inherited systems.Extended Essay — Academia.edu
A full critical essay on The Inherited Throne — examining the work’s philosophical proposition, the sequence of inherited judgment, the argument of maintenance over permanence, and the connection to the author’s book of the same title — is available on Academia.edu.
>> Read: The Inherited Throne — Extended Essay →