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Image courtesy of the Artist
Image courtesy of the Artist
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Citra Sasmita, Who Stole the Sky (2026), installation view, Kunsthall Stavanger. Photo: Erik Sæter Jørgensen. Image courtesy of Kunsthall Stavanger.
Citra Sasmita, Who Stole the Sky (2026), installation view, Kunsthall Stavanger. Photo: Erik Sæter Jørgensen. Image courtesy of Kunsthall Stavanger.
Open a larger version of the following image in a popup:
Citra Sasmita, Who Stole the Sky (2026), installation view, Kunsthall Stavanger. Photo: Erik Sæter Jørgensen. Image courtesy of Kunsthall Stavanger.
Citra Sasmita, Who Stole the Sky (2026), installation view, Kunsthall Stavanger. Photo: Erik Sæter Jørgensen. Image courtesy of Kunsthall Stavanger.
Citra Sasmita
Enigma , 2022
Acrylic on canvas, attached with Endek weaving, beads, coins, wooden dowels
100 x 200cm (Canvas)
100 cm x 300 cm (Endek weaving)
100 cm x 1,4 cm (Wooden dowels)
100 cm x 300 cm (Endek weaving)
100 cm x 1,4 cm (Wooden dowels)
Copyright The Artist
Further images
Extract from Kunsthall Stavanger Exhibition Text by Heather Jones Memorabilia from Far Away Land and Enigma trace Sasmita’s transition between traditional Kamasan painting and Western canvas formats. Enigma explicitly addresses...
Extract from Kunsthall Stavanger Exhibition Text by Heather Jones
Memorabilia from Far Away Land and Enigma trace Sasmita’s transition between traditional Kamasan painting and Western canvas formats. Enigma explicitly addresses colonial violence, with lions symbolising Dutch imperial power in Bali during the nineteenth and twentieth centuries.
Memorabilia from Far Away Land and Enigma trace Sasmita’s transition between traditional Kamasan painting and Western canvas formats. Enigma explicitly addresses colonial violence, with lions symbolising Dutch imperial power in Bali during the nineteenth and twentieth centuries.
Exhibitions
Citra Sasmita: Who Stole the Sky, Kunsthall Stavanger, Stavanger, Norway. 12 March - 16 Aug 2026.
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