invasion.

Invasion is a kinetic sculpture that is a contemplation of geopolitical border.
invasion1
As you enter the exhibition space, the first thing you see are the pots with red sands in it on the floor.
invasion10
Out of the pots come red threads, all going through an opening on a thick wall.
invasion7
In the opening, you see some little metal things – razorblades. They float. It might be magic.
invasion6
But obviously it’s not magic. So perhaps it is science.

Or just trickery of the mind. Perhaps the white threads are made rigid and therefore can hold the razorblade up?

invasion5
You can’t really tell – but the razorblades do float: they bob up and down. And when you touch them they collapse.
invasion3
Each of them is held up by a rare earth magnets cylinder that hangs from the top of the opening. Each of them, however, is also pulled down by the white threads, so that it doesn’t stick to the magnet, but is still within a considerably strong magnetic field. This, in effect, leaves a gap in between, where the red threads coming from the pots can pass.
invasion2
You follow the thread. At the end of it you see kites, hung with hooks at the end of white threads emerging from the ceiling.
invasion8
The kites are made of my family’s citizenship documents. They don’t fly, they’re dead kites. Perhaps they could fly, if the wind was stronger.
invasion9
And if the wind was stronger the fragile razorblades would surely fall. In fact, everything will fall if the wind was strong enough. If the wind was not that strong, perhaps the wall and the opening will stay, and perhaps the pots will stay, but nothing else.
invasion4
All elements in this installation are subtly interconnected. The floating razorblades are as vulnerable as the threads that hold the hanging kites. Thanks to the subtle movement of the air during the exhibition, some threads got cut (and some kites fell down to earth), but some razorblades fell several times as well.
Photos courtesy of Sari Handayani/Cemeti Art House. Invasion is one of a series of work made during my residency at Cemeti Art House.