![]() This process behind the finished sculptures serves as an exploration of the conditions and cost that underlie our being able to have cell phones at all. The works in STRATA are made by a reverse mining practice whereby old American cell phone batteries-bought on eBay-are dismantled to extract the copper, cobalt oxide, and aluminum to create a dye. The visual strata in these works take on a double meaning and symbolize the stratification of humans in the earth as they collect raw material to be exported to Western countries. ![]() These practices infringe on human rights laws and perpetuate colonial and neocolonial strategies of acquiring raw material from Africa with a disregard for the well-being of the workers. Because it is extracted through mining, the dangerous labor of collecting this material is outsourced to citizens of the Congo. Recently, cobalt has become a crucial commodity in the manufacturing of rechargeable batteries, namely, the ones that are found in cell phones. Together, the raffia stained with cobalt create a stratification resembling mineral strata visible in the rocks from which these materials are mined and grown. Cobalt is a metal commonly found in mines in the Congo. Raffia is an organic Congolese cloth used for making textiles in the textured and geometric Kuba style. While each work takes on different forms and styles of sculpture, they all use the same materials: dyed raffia stained with cobalt. STRATA is a series made up of eight textile sculptures.
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