Sebin Joseph
Sebin is a visual artist from Idukki, Kerala, whose practice moves between sculpture, installation, and environmental art. Growing up in a migrant farming community in the Western Ghats, his earliest encounters with art came from nature—tree branches that resembled animals or human figures, which he would collect, carve, and reimagine. This early connection with organic form, texture, and storytelling continues to shape the way he works with material.
Sebin works across both traditional and ephemeral mediums—bronze, wood, and ceramics sit alongside rust, moss, paper pulp, and decaying plant matter. He sees material not just as a formal choice, but as a carrier of cultural and historical memory. The use of impermanent or living elements becomes a way to reflect on what is lost, what can be held, and how transformation occurs over time. Through this, Sebin invites viewers to pause at the edge of things—between the material and the conceptual, permanence and impermanence, destruction and renewal. His sculptures show how the body relates to the land, and explore ideas of survival, memory, and decay. Some works look at how society and politics affect the body, while others focus on the small, often unnoticed connections between people and nature.
Sebin holds a BFA from the College of Fine Arts, Thrissur and an MFA from the College of Fine Arts, Thiruvananthapuram.