Artist Bio: Boring John (Bojo)
Boring John (Bojo) is a Delhi-based visual artist whose work explores the absurdities of contemporary life through photography, sculpture, and painting. Beginning his journey as a photographer, Bojo’s practice has expanded into mixed media, where he blends realism with satire to question the rituals of modern society – consumption, identity, and the quiet chaos of everyday aspiration.Working under a pseudonym allows him the freedom to speak plainly about what most prefer to gloss over. “Boring” isn’t a dismissal – it’s a disguise, a way to look at the world without being looked at first.Concept note: Series: Every Duck Was a Donald
Boring John (Bojo) is a Delhi-based visual artist whose work explores the absurdities of contemporary life through photography, sculpture, and painting. Beginning his journey as a photographer, Bojo’s practice has expanded into mixed media, where he blends realism with satire to question the rituals of modern society – consumption, identity, and the quiet chaos of everyday aspiration.Working under a pseudonym allows him the freedom to speak plainly about what most prefer to gloss over. “Boring” isn’t a dismissal – it’s a disguise, a way to look at the world without being looked at first.Concept note: Series: Every Duck Was a Donald
Between 2020 and 2022, the world lived in an illusion of endless money. Cash flowed, markets soared, and ordinary lives shimmered with sudden luck. Screens became altars; spending became confession. It was a time when every duck thought it was a Donald — every mouse, a Mickey.This body of work captures that surreal moment when fantasy and finance blurred into one. These sculptures aren’t portraits of wealth, but echoes of its performance – the influencer glow, the crypto swagger, the dopamine rush of overnight success. The materials collide to mirror the absurd optimism of those years: glossy, inflated, seductive, and hollow.Through this series, I explore how a culture drunk on easy gain built its own myths of power and worth – how the consumer became both the creator and the product. The figures are playful, even cartoonish, but beneath their shine lies a quiet unease: a reckoning with the dream that money could turn everyone into a mascot.


