Since the late 1990s Secunda has developed a studio practice using paint in a sculptural manner, rejecting the limitations imposed by the canvas. The systems he developed for making objects out of paint continues to be a key part of his painting practice, which started with abstract assemblages and suddenly political in 2001. Whilst living in
New York State in 2001, Secunda was intensely affected by seeing the destruction of the 3,000 year old
Bamiyan Buddhas in
Afghanistan, on the television news and six months later
9/11. Over the following weeks his work started to examine the deliberate destruction of culture. In the years that followed, geopolitics overwhelmed what had previously been an abstract painting practice, to become the primary focus of his work. Over twenty years, Secunda's studio practice has become research-heavy, examining some of the most significant subjects of our time, such as energy and technology history and the deliberate destruction of culture.
No Me Olvides Por Espana, 2022 – ongoing In 2022, Secunda met with
forensic archaeologist Nicholas Marquez-Grant, whose specialization is the excavation of mass graves in Spain which returns the remains of “disappeared” people from the Franco era, to the relatives for formal burial. Following on these conversations, Secunda designed the enamelled “Nome Olvides Por Espana” memorial pin, using the motif of a cluster of Forget-Me-Not flowers. The pin is sold as a uniting symbol for the families whose relations disappeared during the Franco regime, to raise money for the ongoing exhumations carried out by forensic archaeology organisations Mapas De Memoria.
ISIS related works, 2015 – ongoing In 2015 Secunda started visiting the Kurdish region of
Iraq and to travel to recently liberated front line positions with the
Peshmerga, to make moulds of
ISIS damage to the ancient villages as they were liberated. The visit was not without danger: their presence in the village of Tell Arabaa was noticed in March 2015 and resulted in an ISIS mortar attack on their location. The work was shown in London and New York as part of The Missing: Rebuilding the Past exhibition. At the September 2017
UNESCO General Meeting in Paris, at which the discussions revolved around the destruction of culture, Piers met Iraqi Culture Minister
Fryad Rwandzi, who extended him an invitation to meet in Baghdad. In March 2018, Rwandzi provided Piers with a letter to allow him access to the recently liberated
Mosul Museum, to mould the ISIS damage to the monumental
Assyrian sculptures. Secunda also gathered charcoal from the partly burned out Mosul Museum, which was ground down into ink and used to make drawings and later a suite of 5 prints, in collaboration with London print publisher Atelier JI. In 2020, the
Ashmolean Museum commissioned the production of a large installation merging a 3D print of the Ashmolean Museums' own Assyrian Relief, with the Mosul Museum ISIS damage moulds. The installation was exhibited at the Ashmolean Museum in 2020, as part of the exhibition
Owning the Past and subsequently toured the United States with the Yazidi advocacy exhibition ''Nobody's Listening''. In 2021 the
Ashmolean Museum commissioned Secunda to produce an ISIS-related work during the refurbishment of their Middle East room. The work merged a 3D print of the Ashmolean Museum's own Assyrian reliefs with moulded pneumatic drill marks from ISIS destroyed Assyrian sculptures in the Mosul Museum. The work is on permanent display in the Ashmolean Museum. In October 2020, one of the Mosul Museum charcoal ink works was sold in the
Christie's London Post-War and Contemporary Art auction. During the Spring of 2022, four works on paper, made with ink produced from the charred remains of the partly ISIS burned Mosul Museum were acquired by the
Mosul Cultural Museum. One work of the same type was acquired by the
Iraq National Museum, Baghdad.
9/11 related works, 2014 – ongoing In 2014 Piers was given permission from both the director and head conservator of the 9/11 Memorial and Museum in New York city, to laser scan a section of
World Trade Center steel box beam. The digitized section was elongated, 3D printed, cast in rubber and contorted into anthropomorphized human forms. These “Ghost Beam” sculptures merge the Pompeii plaster casts (of human shaped cavities in the Vesuvius ash) with the external steel structure of the Twin Towers. Over the ten years following 9/11, sections of Twin Towers steel beams were distributed to Government buildings and Fire Stations around the United States, as memorials. The
corten steel metal slowly sheds its rolled surface in the form of large rust flakes. Over a two years, Secunda collected the rust flakes which had fallen to the ground around one of the sections of World Trade Center steel, which had been donated to Verbank, New York, in the Union Vale Fire District which is on public view twenty minute's drive from the house which Secunda was living in 2001. In 2020, Secunda commissioned photographers in Pakistan to go to the remains of the destroyed Bin Laden House, turn their backs on the foundations of the compound and photograph “interesting features in the landscape” around the house. One of the photographers returned with photographs of trees. The other returned with photographs of potatoes being dug up in the field adjoining the Bin Laden property. Secunda describes these 9/11 steel beam rust ink paintings as meditations on the passage of 20 years since September 11, 2001. An examination of the passing of the seasons, the renewal of nature and the journey of the steel from the World Trade Centre, back to the soil.
Taliban related works, 2010–2020 In August 2010, Secunda visited Afghanistan for the first time, to make moulds of
Taliban bullet damage.
Phaidon Art book publishers described the works as “The most directly inspired works on the subject of the Afghanistan, that we have seen”. Sardar Ahmad Khan was killed along with his wife and two children in a
Taliban attack on Kabul's Serena Hotel, in 2014, but until his death remained a strong advocate of Secunda' work in the intervening years.
Crude Oil Works, 2008 – ongoing Seeking a paint which functions as a metaphor for human activity, Secunda started making
silkscreen prints using crude oil in 2008. The works acknowledge that humanity is, “for better or worse”, in the midst of the “Petro-Chemical Age” one of the defining eras of humanity. “As the ultimate facilitator human activity and our greatest source of energy, I believe that crude oil must be a strong contender as the ultimate artist's material.” Secunda explained. “Using oils sourced from specific oil fields and countries, I am telling the story of the petro-chemical age.” Elsewhere he said “If I live long enough, I will be able to see the end of the oil age, it will end, not for lack of oil but because something better comes along. I want to witness that.” The crude oil works portray scenes from 20th- and 21st-century life, some banal, some alarming, using crude oils from the places portrayed. == References ==