Yale Observatory, Bethany, Connecticut (2021–2026).

For ZT Tosha, the observatory is the only true connection between humanity and the cosmos. It represents a direct, physical portal—a place where the unfiltered light of stars offers a visceral encounter with reality itself, moving beyond secondhand knowledge to foster awe, humility, and a grounded, empirical link to the universe.

Artistic Statement & Description: “Difference is Repetition”

” Circularity of predetermined images, not thought, is the true beginning.” – ZT Tosha

Medium: Site-specific, two-channel black-and-white video installation (silent).

Location & Duration: Yale Observatory, Bethany, Connecticut (2021–2026). A durational project developed in situ.

Core Concept: An exploration of institutional, measured time against the phenomenological time of the observing body. Using the mechanics of the camera and the projector as parallel timekeeping devices, the work interrogates the genesis of predetermined images within the unique context of an astronomical observatory repurposed for artistic vision.

Detailed Description:

The installation is a durational meditation born from a five-year engagement with the historic Yale Observatory. It occupies a resonant space within the building, likely a former calculation room or a corridor marked by the passage of scholarly time.

Two large, opposing projections create a contemplative environment. On each screen, a series of stark, high-contrast black-and-white photographs are presented—documentary evidence of the artist’s repeated visits. The central subject in every frame is the artist, captured in a state of stilled observation. His gaze is fixed not on the celestial domes or telescopes, but on a utilitarian industrial clock mounted on the observatory wall—a symbol of segmented, quantified, terrestrial time that now governs a space once dedicated to cosmic scale.

The crucial mechanical action is a slow, continuous, and seamless horizontal rotation. The photographs pan from left to right in an infinite scroll. As one image completes its traversal and exits the frame, the next nearly identical one enters from the opposite side. The “difference” between each photograph—taken over months and years—is minute: a shift in the artist’s posture, a change in the fall of light through a window, the almost imperceptible crawl of the clock’s hands. This subtle variation, embedded in the repetitive structure, becomes the true subject, revealing time’s passage where a perfect loop would deny it.

Themes and Interpretation:

  1. The Observatory as Co-Author & Palimpsest (2021-2026): The five-year timeline is intrinsic. The work is an archive of a body in dialogue with a specific architecture over time. It juxtaposes the building’s original purpose—mapping stellar and geological epochs—with the stark reality of its functional, industrial timepiece. The artist becomes a modern-day astronomer of the self, measuring the internal universe of perception against this institutional metric.

  2. Cinema as a Clockwork Mechanism: The left-to-right rotation directly mimics the mechanical action of a film projector, a scanner, or even a seismograph. It makes the “frame” of the medium visible, suggesting our modes of seeing are themselves pre-mechanized. Within an observatory—a site of looking—this asks: what apparatus governs our sight?

  3. Difference in Repetition: The title, evoking philosopher Gilles Deleuze, is performed literally. True repetition is impossible; the slight variations accrued over the project’s long duration are where meaning condenses. The “beginning of thought” happens in the gap between expectation and the noticed flicker of change—the strain in the act of watching, the tension between the archival photograph and the imposed, cinematic motion.

  4. The Body as a Pendulum (2021-2026): The artist’s recurring figure acts as a human pendulum, a counter-weight to the industrial clock. This is not a performance captured once, but a ritual repeated and documented across years. His persistent presence asks: what time does a body in residence keep? Is it the cyclical time of ritual, or is it, too, being wound and set by the larger mechanisms of history and architecture?

Conclusion:

“Difference is Repetition” (2021–2026) is a meditative and rigorous site-specific archive. It transforms the Yale Observatory into a meta-observatory, where the subject of study is time itself, refracted through the lenses of architecture, durational performance, and the cinematic apparatus. It invites the viewer to step into the rhythm of its endless scroll, to lose and then find themselves in the subtle, accumulated gaps between images—gaps filled with five years of light, dust, and quiet observation.

ZT Tosha — Fading Glory
ZT Tosha — Fading Glory
  • Artist : ZT Tosha
    Title: Fading Glory ( IMG 6235 )
    Material: Mixed media (oil and acrylic) on canvas
    Dimensions: 120 × 80 cm
    Year: 2018

Fading Glory is a mixed-media painting that reworks the image of the United States flag through processes of layering, scraping, and partial erasure. Using oil and acrylic together, ZT Tosha destabilises one of the most recognisable political symbols, transforming it from a sign of authority into a surface marked by wear and uncertainty.

Horizontal gestures suggest the flag’s stripes, while red, white, and blue are repeatedly disrupted, smeared, and absorbed into a dark ground. The materials behave differently over time: fast-drying acrylic establishes structure, while oil remains fluid, allowing forms to blur and slip. This tension produces an image that appears both asserted and undone.

Rather than depicting the flag as an object of celebration or critique, the work treats it as something subjected to use, repetition, and erosion. The title, Fading Glory, points to the instability of symbolic power and the way national imagery can lose clarity through historical pressure.

The painting situates itself within a broader contemporary practice that revisits abstraction as a means of political reflection, not through representation, but through material process. The flag emerges not as a fixed emblem, but as a fragile construction—one that can be worn down, altered, and re-read.


The Assembler, Disassembled: The Unedited Sessions of Andreas 

Product Details:

  • ISBN-13: 9798218889876
    Publisher: Pencilbrains, LLC.
    Publication date: 01/20/2026
    Series: A Companion to the Invention of Androf Andreas
    Edition description: Archival ed.
    Pages: 212
    Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x 0.48(d)

” The Assembler, Disassembled: The Unedited Sessions of Andreas” by author ZT Tosha, a work exploring systemic breakdown, meaninglessness, and the mechanics of belief through austere, observational prose, often compared to Beckett or Sebald, documenting processes rather than personal journeys. 

Key Points:
  • Author: Zt Tosha.
  • Title: The Assembler, Disassembled: The Unedited Sessions of Andreas (or similar variations).
  • Genre/Style: Conceptual, avant-garde; focuses on systematic failure, administrative processes, and the reduction of meaning to procedure, with no traditional narrative resolution.
  • Themes: Existential breakdown, infrastructure of self, collapse of belief systems.
  • Content: Uses machinery and systems as metaphors for existence, documenting a process of dismantling meanin