Orla Melissa | Yoganna

Her most renowned series, "The Half-Life of Habitation" (2019–2024), features standing stelae that juxtapose the geometry of Minimalism with the entropy of organic matter. One piece, "Ghost Acre" , incorporates soil from three abandoned Irish famine villages, binding it with iron oxide and salt-glaze shards. The result is a pillar that leaches rust-colored tears in humid weather—a literal exudation of historical trauma.

Yoganna’s signature method involves the collection of site-specific refuse: rusted farm tools, fragmented household ceramics, pulverized brick, and charred timber. Rather than cleaning or restoring these materials, she amplifies their patina of neglect. Using a binder of foraged plant resins, lime, and local clay, she compresses these fragments into monolithic, slab-like forms that resemble unearthed archaeological relics from a future that has already forgotten us. orla melissa yoganna

Critics have noted a tension in her work between the brutalist and the devotional. Artforum described her 2022 solo show at the Douglas Hyde Gallery as "a chapel for the broken," while others have compared her formal language to a pastoral Joseph Beuys—trading fat and felt for bog oak and broken delftware. Her most controversial piece, "Mother, Ashing" , incorporated the actual charred remains of her childhood home after a wildfire, a move some called transcendent and others voyeuristic. Her most renowned series, "The Half-Life of Habitation"