The Throne Built on Borrowed Earth examines authority as a temporary construction — elevated not by legitimacy, but by displacement. The throne does not rise from its own ground; it rests upon matter taken, shifted, and reassembled. Power appears here as an arrangement rather than a foundation.
The body does not claim dominance. It occupies a position that is structurally unstable, aware of its provisional nature. Myth, traditionally used to sanctify rule, is inverted: elevation is shown to depend on what lies beneath, and what lies beneath is never owned.
This image frames sovereignty as contingent — sustained by borrowed ground and maintained through imbalance.