“We’re going to make stuff out of beads that’s going to take individuals’s breath away,” says Ralph Ziman within the trailer for “The MiG-21 Undertaking,” a navy jet that he and a transcontinental staff coated nostril to tail in hundreds of thousands upon hundreds of thousands of glass beads.
For the previous 12 years, the Los Angeles-based artist has examined the impacts of the Chilly Battle Period and the worldwide arms commerce via a trilogy titled Weapons of Mass Manufacturing, motivated by his upbringing in Apartheid-era South Africa. Greater than half a decade within the making, “The MiG-21 Undertaking” completes the sequence.
The primary installment, “The AK-47 Undertaking,” reimagined the aesthetic of one of many world’s most ubiquitous wartime weapons, the Avtomat Kalashnikova 1947, by sculpting dozens of the weapons and coating them in colourful glass beads. The second venture revolved across the Casspir, a heavy-duty Mine-Resistant Ambush Protected Automobile (MRAPV) launched within the Nineteen Seventies, which he likewise ornamented in vibrant geometric patterns.
“The concept was to take these weapons of struggle and to repurpose them,” Ziman says, flipping the narrative about icons of violence and reworking them as an alternative into symbols of resilience, collaboration, and collectivity. Autos and firearms morph right into a theater of hope and energy within the face of a horrible Twentieth-century legacy.
Apartheid, which in Afrikaans means “separateness,” is the title assigned by the minority white-ruled Nationalist Celebration of South Africa to a harsh system of racial segregation that started in 1948. The interval lasted till 1991 and was carefully linked throughout the context of worldwide relations to the Chilly Battle as tensions erupted between the U.S. and the previous U.S.S.R. Spurred by the deterioration of the 2 international locations’ WWII alliance and fears concerning the unfold of Communism into the West, the struggle started in 1947 and likewise resulted in 1991 when the usS.R. was dissolved.
Throughout this time, the Russians produced a fighter jet referred to as the Mikoyan-Gurevich MiG-21. The airplane is “the most-produced supersonic fighter plane of all time,” Ziman says. “The Russians constructed 12,500 MiG-21s, and so they’re nonetheless in use right this moment—identical to the Casspir and identical to the AK-47s. But it surely’s one factor to say, hey, I wish to bead a MiG, after which the following factor, you’ve acquired a 48-foot MiG sitting in your studio.”
“The MiG-21 Undertaking” combines images and costume design with historic analysis and time-honored Indigenous craft. The venture encompasses not solely the jet however a sequence of cinematic images and elaborate Afrofuturist regalia impressed by navy flight fits, African tribal textiles, and house journey.
Ziman’s staff contains quite a few expert artisans from Zimbabwe and Indigenous Ndebele girls from South Africa’s Mpumalanga Province, who’re renowned for their beadwork. For the Ndebele, beadwork is a method of expressing cultural id and rites of passage, taking over highly effective political connotations within the Twentieth century because it turned related to pre-colonial African traditions and id.
Tapping into the teachings of our not-so-distant previous, Ziman addresses present conflicts like struggle and the worldwide arms race, fashionable colonialism, systemic racism, and white supremacy via the lens of Apartheid. Funds raised all through the method, a part of the mission of the Weapons of Mass Manufacturing trilogy as a complete, are being donated to the individuals of Ukraine in help of the nation’s ongoing battle with Russia.
You’ll be capable to see the “The MiG-21 Undertaking” later this 12 months in Seattle, the place it is going to be on view from June 21 to January 26, 2026, on the Museum of Flight. Discover extra on Ziman’s website.







