Lara Baladi's Cosmovision exhibition, shown at Tintera until January 11, features over one hundred works, more than half displayed for the first time, spanning 1996 to 2011. It transforms Baladi's archive into an autobiographical epistemic apparatus, exploring her social, political, and spiritual quest. Visitors are invited to construct meaning through navigation of the spaces between images.
The making of Cosmovision officially began during a residency at the Civitella Ranieri Foundation, where Baladi printed a roll of photographs on a contact sheet, cut them, and pinned the strongest images to her studio wall. She grouped the remaining photographs aesthetically by tonality and feeling, a new approach to her work. Back in Cairo, she collaborated with the gallery to select final pieces, designating framed works as anchor images and unframed ones as punctuation, displayed in affectively inspired constellations. Only framed works were available for sale.
Among highlighted pieces is Digital Alienation (2003) from the Shish Kebab series, created after six months in Japan, which Baladi described as overwhelming due to the volume of digital images consumed. The stay coincided with the US invasion of Iraq, heightening her engagement with digital imagery to access information about her home region. A 2025 wallpaper behind the panel features a collage of self-portraits from her Japan archive, embodying time's unfolding in the exhibition.
Monumental works Oum El Dounia (2000) and Sandouk El Dounia (2001) serve as stabilizing elements within the exhibition's commercial framework. It concludes with Pop Corn & Revolution (2011) and an exit sign, marking 2011's climax with the Egyptian revolution, when the ceiling of her Zamalek apartment collapsed minutes after she left the room.
In a 2016 essay, Baladi wrote: “Writing used to petrify me. Making images allowed me to speak the things I did not dare to express in words... As time goes on, what I most desperately seek is the silence between thoughts, where I can root and grow.” In a 2018 interview, she expressed interest in how things gain new meanings over time, transforming the present into a dynamic dialogue with the past. In a 2012 interview, she rejected being defined as a female Arab artist, stating it “does no more than state the obvious in a way that reveals little or nothing”.
Anatomy of Revolution (2019–) reactivates her digital archive Vox Populi, compiling material from the 2011 Egyptian revolution and other global social movements. The exhibition functions as an atlas, generating tension with linear narration and emphasizing photography as an archival and epistemic structure.