Singapore Art Museum SAM at 8Q
Still Moving presents three co-curated exhibitions focusing on the nature of the image as explored in the art of photography and new media.
Organised and co-curated by Singapore Art Museum, the exhibitions are in partnership with the Singapore International Photography Festival, Deutsche Bank, and the Yokohama Museum of Art respectively.
In Afterimage: Contemporary Photography from Southeast Asia, artists use non-traditional photographic techniques to articulate concerns about the cultural, political and social landscapes of the region.
In Time Present: Photography from the Deutsche Bank Collection, the works of renowned international artists show the multiple possibilities of photography in history over time.
Image & Illusion: Video Works from the Yokohama Museum of Art Collection features experimental new media works that expand their subject matter beyond the limits of the medium and representation. As an artistic construction, the image is never self-evident or transparent, but instead always manifests the particularities of history, and the weight of its own time.
Shirin Aliabadi, Kader Attia, Yto Barrada, Zohra Bensemra, Gerard Bryne, Cai Guo-Qiang, Cao Fei, Eiffel Chong, Genevieve Chua, John Clang, Peter Coffin, Susan Derges, Philip-Lorca diCorcia, Dinh Q. Lê, Luigi Ghirri, Andreas Gursky, Siobhán Hapaska, Agan Harahap, Mathilde ter Heijne, Candida Höfer, Takashi Ishida, Idris Khan, Yeondoo Jung, Martin Liebscher, Yagi Lyota, Boris Mikhailov, Julio César Morales, Wawi Navarroza, Nge Lay, Cornelia Parker, Gary Ross Pastrana, Gerhard Richter, Klaus Rinke, Tokihiro Sato, Michael Shaowanasai, Dayanita Singh, Thomas Struth, Hiroshi Sugimoto, Yaya Sung, Tadasu Takamine, Abednego Trianto, Tsai Charwei, Miwa Yanagi, Liana Yang, Yee I-Lann, Zhu Jia
2009
video (edition 3 out of 5) duration 2:30 mins
Taiwanese artist Tsai Charwei’s practice is largely influenced by Buddhist philosophy. Some of her most seminal works involve working with organic and perishable materials such as lotus leaves, mushrooms, tofu, and incense, and this follows the artist’s interest in realising the philosophical concepts of emptiness, in tangible yet temporal forms. By working with ephemeral material, the mutable nature of her work is subject to decay and dissolution, and resists permanent form, highlighting the nature of change as an enduring constant.
Baptism, which was filmed at the Medieval medieval church of Saint Severin in Paris, France, features a close-up video of the Christian rite frequently performed on young children as a ritual of joining the faith. In this initiation tradition, Tsai presents what she calls a “reverse baptism”, where it is the hands of a child cleansing her mother’s hands, rather than that of a parent or an elder blessing the child.
2013
photographic prints (c-print with gold lacquer box)
Dinh Q Le's Scroll series appropriates of iconic images of the Vietnam War as the titles reveal: Thich Quang Duc, the burning monk, Phan Thi Kim Phuc, the napalm girl, and the victims of the killings at Mai Lai. Capitalising on the abilities of digital photographic technologies, Le stretched the three images using image-editing software and printed them onto 50-metre long scrolls on photographic paper. The content of the original photographs and any discernible signifiers are lost as the images disintegrate into abstract indexical signs imprinted on the folded paper, forbidding us yet again another entry into the totality of the printed image.
This series encapsulates Le's continuous artistic exploration of the materiality of photographic images, following his well-known photo-weaving series that also fused documentary images from the Vietnam War. It also makes a strong proposition about the ways technology has influenced our collective memory and our perception of global politics.
2012
digital c-type print on metallic paper mounted onto black pvc (set of 52)
Alluding to Henri Matisse’s gouaches découpés, the unexpectedly rich orange colours of the bodily abstract forms in this series are choreographed against a brilliant, placeless blue background. However, unlike the famous paper cut-outs, the embraced and embracing figures are not imagined: they have an indexical nature, having been extracted from original photographs circulated on social media platforms, which Yee sourced via her own network of family, friends and acquaintances.
The abstract configurations stand for what the artist explains is the “experience of domination and indignity between the West Malayan on the peninsula over the marginalised East Malayan in Borneo”, where she is originally from. They aim to remind us that domination is always the politicians’ remit played against ordinary people’s empathy and compassion, as manifested in the act of embracement, physical and metaphorical. James C. Scott coined the term of “hidden transcript”, for “off stage” political discourse and action (such as gossip, mocking, the joke, and vengeful tones) beyond the intimidating gaze of power. The hidden transcript is illustrated here through a visually enticing language that allows the politics of the body to demystify the structures of power and assume a new form of resistance. Yee sees this series as a form of visual incantation that she recites during her engagement in political street demonstrations in Malaysia, hoping that The Sun will rise in the East and deliver us from this long night.