Seen.Today

A Visual Journal of Aesthetics and Design Culture

A Visual Journal of Aesthetics and Design Culture

Bagus Pandega | Daya Benda

The Swiss Institute located in NYC’s East Village is the site for Indonesian artist Bagus Pandega’s first institutional exhibition, Daya Benda. On the surface, the installations create a cyberpunk atmosphere combining biological samples, electronics, a techno soundtrack and a custom neon-hued electric drag bike. For me, it checks a lot of boxes.

But beyond the surface looks, this trio of pieces aims to raise awareness of the historical and present day over extraction of natural resources in Indonesia. It’s a place geographically far from NYC and not easy to view what’s going on there. Hyperpnea Green, the large circular shaped piece is a functioning oxygen generator that incorporates jarred samples of native Indonesia plant species harvested and resold in the US as tropical houseplants.

Anim Wraksa and Putar Petir Racing Team both reference Indonesia place as the world’s largest nickel exporter. Nickel is a key metal in the production of batteries and alloy materials like stainless steel, meaning it’s in all our electronics and appliances these days. The sci-fi looking Anim Wraksa is a tank filled with an electrolyte solution that is continuously nickel plating a tree branch sample Pandega collected. Putar Petir Racing Team is a critique of our electronics obsession taking the form of a working battery-powered drag bike. The paint style is influenced by the Indonesian slang term jamet, meaning over the top and tacky. In addition to the bike are apparel and parts that support the fictitious race team who’s name translates from Malay to “Spinning Lightening”.

Full Description

Swiss Institute (SI) is pleased to present the first institutional exhibition of Indonesian artist Bagus Pandega. Pandega’s work ingeniously addresses the extraction of natural resources in Indonesia—from the 16th century spice trade in nutmeg and cloves, to the palm oil industry, to the contemporary global demand for nickel used in batteries for computers, phones, and electric vehicles. Adopting a do-it-yourself, hacker approach, Pandega constructs modular systems using readily available, everyday technologies, natural materials such as plants and rare earth minerals, and musical instruments. These responsive installations are programmed to trigger mechanical and chemical reactions that generate sound or movement, influenced by changes in hyperlocal conditions such as human presence in the space.

Upon entering the gallery, visitors encounter Hyperpnea Green (2024), a large-scale sculptural installation composed of concentric circles suspended from the ceiling. Positioned along the rings’ circumference are transparent containers housing minerals extracted in Indonesia, native plants commonly sold as houseplants in the US, lights, and a music box. These components are connected to an oxygen machine and a monitoring system that activates chains of biofeedback in reaction to signals set off by the metabolisms of both plants and humans. As viewers exhale carbon dioxide, the apparatus responds by pumping oxygen into the space. Hyperpnea is the medical term for rapid or deep breathing to meet increased oxygen demand. The installation highlights our dependency on the natural world, which we simultaneously deplete through unstable consumption, alongside illuminating the interdependence between organic and artificial systems.

Presented nearby is the newly commissioned installation Anim Wraksa (2025), whose title is derived from Kawi, or Old Javanese, translating to “the spirit of the tree.” Inside an acrylic container filled with an electrolyte solution, a tree branch undergoes a continuous process of nickel plating. Indonesia is the world’s largest exporter of nickel, and its extraction has led to deforestation, water pollution, and soil toxicity – disrupting not only the environment but also social and spiritual relations. Throughout the duration of the show, the branch will continue to accumulate metal, transforming the object over time. A live transmission of the process is broadcast to a large LED wall on SI’s rooftop — which itself includes nickel — visible both from the terrace and the street level below. The image is massively enlarged and flipped upside down, reversing the upward flow of hydrogen gas bubbles released during the plating process so that they appear to fall like raindrops or tears.

On the second floor is the new commission Putar Petir Racing Team (2025), both a sculpture and a fully operational electric battery-powered motorcycle that Pandega built from scratch. The bike is sprayed in gleaming shades of purple, pink, and gold, drawing inspiration from the local jamet aesthetic – a slang blend of “Javanese” and “metal” that refers to a metalhead-influenced street style associated with popular drag racing. Nearby, a video documents a drag race Pandega organized in Bandung, in which his EV motorcycle competed against regular gasoline-powered bikes. The sculpture and video are accompanied by a custom racing jersey and helmet from a fictitious team created by the artist, displayed on a wall painted in the green hue commonly found in modest homes in Indonesia.

Embedding viewers in feedback loops of electricity, breath, and movement, Pandega foregrounds relations shaped by cycles of life, extraction, and reciprocity. Guided by a DIY engineering ethos and a deep engagement with materials, his works convey a sense of both precariousness and vulnerability, experimentation and ingenuity.

Photos and Text: Dave Pinter

Additional Description: Swiss Institute

Hyperpnea Green (2024)

Anim Wraksa (2025)

Putar Petir Racing Team (2025)

Posted In

Tags

Related Posts

Published from Brooklyn, New York

Published from Brooklyn, New York