Sasha Huber | North Star (Ø 22cm)

Year2022
Mediumwhite gold leaf (12 carat gold) on metal staples on wood
SizeØ 22cm x 4cm
Categories

Edition of 40
Delivery time: by order 2-4 weeks

1550,00 

Available

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ShippingThe price of the artwork includes shipping within EuropeRest of the world: please contact info@lokalhelsinki.com for a shipping quote
View the pieceThe work can be viewed at Lokal gallery, Annankatu 9, 00120 Helsinki. Please contact us at +358 41 314 1794 or info@lokalhelsinki.com to ensure the piece is at Annankatu when you plan to visit. Welcome to view the piece!

Additional information

Artists

Material 2

Size 2

S (Ø < 30cm)

Rarity

Style

Abstract, Figurative

Medium

Sasha Huber (b. 1975) is a visual artist of Swiss-Haitian heritage. Born in Zurich, Switzerland, she currently lives and works in Helsinki, Finland. Huber’s work is primarily concerned with history’s influence on the present and focuses mainly on the ramifications of colonialism. She’s sensitive to the subtle threads that connect historical attitudes to modern outlooks, and works with performance-based interventions, video, photography, publications, graphic design and archival material.

“I am originally from Zurich, and I’ve lived in Finland since twenty years now, and it is here that I started my artistic career during my studies. It is during those studies that I discovered the staple gun for myself, and immediately realised that it is like a weapon. The weight and sound, and the fact that I had to protect my ears, and eyes as well, reminded me very much of a weapon. I realised that I would like to use this when it somehow relates to this symbolic meaning.

I can discuss issues that I am interested about, and at the beginning, it was a lot about my mother’s heritage, or where my mother comes from, which is Haiti. And so the stapling, as a methodology, changed from shooting to becoming more of a stitching of the colonial wound. And rather, to tell stories of people that were silenced in history, or have not been remembered, and to use my energy more for highlighting those histories."



Sasha Huber