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"Earthworks" by Sem Lala features a striking composition dominated by a vivid red background with black geometric shapes, evoking a sense of urgency and warning. These angular forms resemble architectural plans, symbolizing communication across time and echoing suprematist influences. The print medium enhances the graphic quality, emphasizing the contrast between the shapes and the intense backdrop. Inspired by plans for the Waste Isolation Pilot Program, the artwork probes the longevity and clarity of messages, questioning the permanence of warning systems through a universal visual language. ...
Sem Lala presents a new series of silk-screened paintings inspired by architect Mike Brill’s designs for the Waste Isolation Pilot Program (WIPP), which aims to warn future civilizations about buried nuclear waste. These works draw from Brill’s earthwork plans, which use geometric shapes to communicate danger across thousands of years. Lala’s paintings highlight the visual similarities between these warning systems and formalist art movements like suprematism, which sought a universal language of shapes and symbols. By blending these ideas, the series explores how meaning shifts over time and questions whether any message can remain clear forever. Sem Lala (b. 2000 in Elbasan, Albania) is an artist and musician based in New York, currently studying at Bard College. His work explores themes of agency and appropriation, encompassing both visual art and performance. Lala often examines how cultural shifts and appropriation influence artistic expression. He has exhibited widely, including solo exhibitions at Foksal Gallery Foundation in Warsaw (2025), Hot Wheels Gallery in Athens (2024), and Plymouth Rock in Zurich (2021). His work has also been featured in group exhibitions at Weiss Falk in Basel (2020), gta Exhibitions in Zurich (2020), Haus Wien in Vienna (2021), Les Urbaines in Lausanne (2020), and Lateral Roma in Rome (2021) and among many others. ...