Thursday, April 9, 2026

My Notes on Silent Monumentalism | Pieter Lategan,10 April 2026

Silent Monumentalism is the artistic philosophy and structural discipline I began developing in early 2026. It moves away from the usual narrative-driven monuments — those loud, symbolic objects that try to tell you what to think and feel — toward something quieter and more fundamental: forms that simply stand. These works create a physical presence through mass, weight, and stillness, without explanation, story, or symbolism. The approach draws from sculpture, architecture, and minimalism, but its real focus is on how block, plane, void, and ground can generate inward attention rather than outward messaging.

Here are three recent studies that show the direction I am working toward:


Figure 1 - Image by Pieter Lategan 10 April 2026


Monument Figure 1 shows a long, grounded horizontal plane with a single vertical mass at one end — a quiet threshold that interrupts the emptiness.





Figure 2 - Image by Pieter Lategan 10 April 2026

Monument Figure 2 is a low, compressed enclosure with stepped planes — something you can sit on or walk around, creating a defined space without closing it off.



Figure 2 - Image by Pieter Lategan 10 April 2026

Monument Figure 3 places two small figures beside a long block and taller upright form. The human scale makes the weight and silence of the structure more palpable.
These drawings are not final proposals but explorations of presence.Why This MattersIn our time of constant digital noise, political shouting matches, and information overload, silent monumentalism offers a necessary counter-position. It asks a basic question: Does a monument need to speak? Or can it simply exist as a weighted, contemplative presence — a space or an absence — that allows people to stand with it and with themselves? This has clear implications for contemporary art, public memorials, civic architecture, and even how we find stillness in a fast world.Core ConceptsThese are the ideas I return to most often in my studio notes:

  1. Stillness
    The deliberate removal of gesture and narrative so the work — and the viewer — can settle. This is the heart of the whole approach.
  2. Weight / Mass
    The grounded, compressed gravity of blocks and forms. It gives monumentality through structural truth rather than size or decoration.
  3. Presence

    The work exists as a “being,” not an image or message. The essential question changes from “What does it mean?” to “What is happening while I am looking?”
  4. Block / Plane / Void / Ground

    These are the basic grammar. Block for mass, plane for surface and division, void for activated absence, ground as anchor. Everything reduces to their relationships.
  5. Absence as Monument

    A monument does not always need to be a physical object. The loss of something — like Mukurob in Namibia — can itself become monumental.
  6. Structural Discipline (not a style)

    This is a way of thinking and making. Form follows internal logic, not aesthetics or trends.
  7. Form as Rule

    Elements are placed according to relational logic. Balance comes from relationship, not symmetry or artistic ego.
  8. Inward Presence

    Forms turn inward, holding their own gravity. This creates psychological space for the viewer instead of demanding response.
  9. No Narrative / No Symbolism

    A clear rejection of story, emotion, decoration, or imposed meaning. This is the most radical part of the work.
  10. Monument as Presence / Space

    A monument can be something you stand in front of, or a space you exist within — not merely an object to be looked at.
Perspectives ComparedTraditional Monumentalism uses scale, symbolism, and narrative to express power, memory, or identity. It tells. It is clear and effective for national stories, but easily becomes propaganda or outdated.

Counter-Monuments / Anti-Monumentalism (especially post-WWII Germany) reject authoritarian forms and instead provoke dialogue, often through temporary or critical works. They are activist and interactive. They open difficult conversations but can lack lasting physical presence.

Silent Monumentalism (my own position) sits between these. It offers pure structural being — weight, stillness, and activated absence. It is contemplative rather than activist. Its strength is timeless, non-demanding depth. Its possible weakness is that it may feel too minimal for situations that require explicit messaging.New Monumentalism / Monuments of Void overlaps in its interest in absence and emptiness, but often remains more philosophical. My approach is more disciplined and structural.