It is what is it: chi too and his stupid ideas
Dec
7
to Dec 22

It is what is it: chi too and his stupid ideas

For our final show of 2024, chi too will be returning to The Back Room for his ninth solo exhibition, It is what is it. As a collection of stupid ideas brought to life, theexhibition is a return of sorts, back to the 2010s when chi too first started practising as an artist. This was a time of playful happenings, absurd performances, and meticulously made objects. It was also a moment of community and experimentation. chi too was variously part of a sometimes artist collective, an art rock band, and the organising committee for a festival as part of a fictitious North Korean art collective. However, after this period his absurdities became less public. Instead, they manifested behind closed doors in the studio, where he set to work making conceptual paintings with strict rules.  

Now at the end of 2024, It is what is it puts chi too back in the spotlight, to revamp a certain time and energy. Despite being an introvert, he has decided to host a party. Mainly performative in nature, most of the works won’t exist until opening night. On that evening, gallery goers can expect a race to the finish of unravelling packing tape, karaoke word puns between Tina Turner and Elton John, and indoor fireworks. A collection of publicly donated IKEA SAMLA boxes will also be on display, complete with existing personal contents, as a window into people’s lives. Post-opening night, only a curious hangover of residues will be left, remnants of the best party most people will never know about.

As a trip down memory lane, It is what is it serves as a reminder of how wit and humour are indispensable parts of chi too’s work. His brand of visual punning and playfulness brings a refreshing break from the seriousness of Art. And this is theheart of chi too’s show, a reminder to play and be stupid, to find authenticity in experimentation and community in fun.


Opening reception: Saturday, 7 December 2024, from 7pm onwards
Exhibition dates: 7 – 22 December 2024

 

About the Artist

chi too (b. 1981, Kuala Lumpur) is a self-taught multidisciplinary artist whose practice demonstrates a confident exploration of humour, satire, and visual poetics.

He has exhibited and performed locally and internationally. In 2017, he was an artist-in-residence at the NTU Centre for Contemporary Art, Singapore, and in 2011, he was selected as a Nippon Foundation Asian Public Intellectual (API) fellow. Including the present exhibition, chi too has had nine solo exhibitions to date: A Sea of Despair and Delight, The Godown Arts Center (2023);  It Will Be Noisy, Messy, and Very Touchy-Feely, The Back Room (2022); 95, The Zhongshan Building (2020); Sometimes When We Touch, OUR ArtProjects (2018); Like Someone In Love, Lostgens' Contemporary Art Space (2015); The Artist chi too Looks at Artworks as He Contemplates the State of the Nation’s Institutions a.k.a. How Can You Be Sure, Art Row @ Publika (2013); Longing, Black Box, MAP @ Publika (2011), all in Kuala Lumpur, and State of Doubt: Seven Actions Towards Dilemma, Art Lab AKIBA in Tokyo, Japan (2012).

He has participated in group exhibitions in Kuala Lumpur, Jakarta, Singapore, Taipei, and Japan. The most recent of these include ROH Projects @ Art Jakarta 2024; Unbearable Lightness at ROH Projects, Jakarta (2024); and Titik, Garis, Bentuk: Drawing as Practice at ILHAM Gallery, Kuala Lumpur (2024). In 2022, he was featured in the publication, Prime — Art's Next Generation by Phaidon, a compilation of “the most exciting rising stars in contemporary art” featuring 107 artists born since 1980.


 

Installation shots

Photos by Kenta Chai.

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排一排 Side by Side 排一排 by Liew Kwai Fei
Oct
23
to Nov 17

排一排 Side by Side 排一排 by Liew Kwai Fei

The Back Room proudly presents 排一排 Side by Side 排一排 (pai yi pai), a solo exhibition by Liew Kwai Fei, in collaboration with HARTA at their gallery in Ampang. The exhibition presents over 30 paintings, including triptychs, of previously unexhibited paintings created at different times in the artist’s practice. The paintings will be exhibited side by side, non-chronologically, in a dynamic exhibition that encourages viewers towards a deeper and broader contemplation of painting and its traditions.  

Liew Kwai Fei (b. 1979, Kuantan, Pahang) is one of the nation’s most prolific contemporary painters, having had 13 solo exhibitions prior to Side by Side. Since around 2018, Liew has devoted most of his practice to making paintings that, for the sake of convenience, can be categorised within the genre of “abstraction”—although if there is anything to be learned from Liew’s practice, it is that the final work of art often evades and transcends preconceived rules of categorisation. The works in Side by Side have been selected largely from his series “The Art of Painting 2.0” (created between 2017–2019) and “Gesture. Abstraction. Painting. 1.0” and “Gesture. Abstraction. Painting. 2.0” (created between 2019–2024). 

The numerals that accompany each series’ name suggest how difficult it is to categorise or articulate the artist’s practice in words, but they also suggest that perhaps the more appropriate way to approach painting is not through titles, words, numbers, and other clerical detail, but rather through encountering a painting face to face, with full openness of the senses. Even the titles of the series remain ambiguous and broad, created more for the sake of convenience rather than as a necessary supplement to the painting. In the final analysis, each painting stands on its own. The titles of the series can help to compile certain concerns that the artist was occupied with at a specific time, but a final appreciation of them has to be reached by the viewer on their own in direct contact with the painting. 

The paintings of “The Art of Painting (TAP) 2.0”, created between 2017–2019, are distinguished by the appearance of thicker brushstrokes and block-like structures, as if elements in the painting were built or stacked atop each other. The pleasures that the paintings inspire are likely due to their strategies of juxtaposition, whether it’s the way certain colours associate with each other upon the canvas or the way organic strokes disrupt coloured geometries. Selections from its elder sibling, “The Art of Painting 1.0”, were previously exhibited in This Is Where We Meet at OUR ArtProjects gallery in 2017. 

On the other hand, “Gesture. Abstraction. Painting. (GAP) 1.0” and “GAP 2.0” are distinguished by their intensity and depth. The paintings are worked on more convolutedly, and it’s more difficult to distinguish strokes and colours from each other due to a greater use of blending and a wider array of brush sizes. Even between the paintings of “GAP 1.0” (selections of which were previously exhibited in Nothing Personal at Rissim Contemporary, Bangsar, in 2022) and “GAP 2.0”, there are divergences, with the paintings of the latter displaying more unusual composition and experimental, non-painterly elements such as the use of flicking, dripping, and the distillation of paint with water or ink to create a bleeding effect. 

Such puzzles have long characterised Liew’s paintings which, despite being rather taciturn in offering supplementary detail, are nevertheless crafted with the idea of a Viewer, for it is only with the presence of a viewer—and that viewer’s preconceived notions—that the paintings’ playful and mischievous qualities can be fully activated. 

Exhibition dates: 23 October – 17 November 2024
Opening reception: 2 November 2024 from 2pm – 5pm
Artist tours: 9 November and 16 November, 3pm


HARTA
Level 1, Lot 93-95 Lorong Memanda 2, 
68000 Ampang, Selangor 

Opening hours: 
Tuesday – Sunday
10am – 5pm
(Closed on Monday)



 

Exhibition Essay

 

Artwork details and prices


 

Installation shots


 
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A Small Little Place Called Hong Kong 彈丸之地 by Cho Wing Ki
Oct
20
to Nov 24

A Small Little Place Called Hong Kong 彈丸之地 by Cho Wing Ki

We are proud to announce our latest exhibition of new prints and paintings by Hong Kong artist Cho Wing Ki, curated by Malaysian-Hong Kong curator Krystie Ng. Longtime visitors to the gallery may be familiar with Krystie through an earlier show she curated at the gallery back in 2019 titled Carving Reality.


Curatorial statement

Hong Kong, a bustling metropolis, lively and vibrant, rich in culture and history, shaped by the resilient spirit of its people. This vibrant city, often envisioned as a hub of perpetual activity and tradition, holds narratives that resonate far beyond its skyline of skyscrapers. But what of the lesser-known tales that unfold in the quieter corners? Away from the urban centre, what experiences shape the daily lives of ordinary Hong Kong residents? These stories, while less visible, are equally inspiring to understanding the true essence of this dynamic city.

In this ever-changing city, there are indeed many qualities that remain static. Think of the street vendors who have been selling newspapers and cigarettes for decades, the janitor at the community hall works around the clock, the security guards at your residential block commute each day to work, the waitress at your favourite cha chaan teng that doesn’t speak native cantonese, and even the unnamed plants and wandering animals in the neighbourhood garden. They have always been there, often unnoticed and unappreciated, whether in rain or shine.

This October, I am excited to invite Hong Kong emerging artist Cho Wing Ki for a showcase of her recent works in Kuala Lumpur in an exhibition titled The Small Little Place Called Hong Kong. The exhibit will present a recent collection of eight prints and six paintings by the artist. This exhibition is dedicated to the tiny people and the overlooked elements that form and sustain the fabric of the city.

Krystie Ng
August 2024, Kowloon


Opening reception: Sunday, 20 October from 3pm – 6pm
Exhibition dates: 20 October – 24 November 2024

 

About the Artist

Cho Wing Ki (b. 1989, Hong Kong) is an alumna of the Chinese University of Hong Kong, where she earned a Bachelor’s degree in Fine Arts. Specialising in oil painting and printmaking, her artistic practice primarily explores the minutiae of urban life and the people within her surroundings. Through her keen observations and delicately detailed works, Cho leads us into the daily lives of ordinary city dwellers and the role of the artist within various groups and communities. Her artworks aim to share the transformative power of art-making and engage with the challenges faced by the community she is passionate about.

Cho has been showcased in galleries across Hong Kong, Korea and Israel. Her recent exhibitions include Good Night, Sleep Tight: A Solo Exhibition by Cho Wing Ki (2021), Cho Cho Chit Chit: A Solo Exhibition by Cho Wing Ki (2015), and Box of LeeLeeLooLoo (2023). Beyond her exhibitions, Cho is also active in community art initiatives. She served as the 2022–23 artist-in-residence for the Jockey Club Artistry Creative Ageing Project and participated in The Practice of Everyday Life (2020), the Hok Hok Zaap Programme (2019–20), and Sparkle! Counting the Days (2018).

Cho is also a member of Prinhow, a printmaking collective that works with marginalised groups to address social issues.

About the Curator

Born in Kuala Lumpur and currently based in Hong Kong, Krystie Ng is a researcher and curator focused on alternative art practices and narratives in contemporary art.


 

Installation shots


Artworks

Paintings

Prints

 
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The Back Room @ Art Jakarta 2024
Oct
4
to Oct 6

The Back Room @ Art Jakarta 2024

The Back Room are proud to be participants of ART JAKARTA 2024, taking place at JIEXPO Kemayoran from 4 – 6 October 2024.

Our booth (A12) presents a line-up of Malaysian artists that we’ve frequently worked with in the past, namely: Chong Siew Ying, Liew Kwai Fei, Marcos Kueh, Nadirah Zakariya, and Ong Hieng Fuong. The presentation will span various mediums, including painting, photography, and drawing.

The Back Room @ Art Jakarta 2024
Booth A12
JIEXPO Kemayoran
(Jakarta International Expo)
Jakarta Pusat 10620, Indonesia

VIP Preview (by invitation only):
Friday, 4 October, 1pm – 6pm

Vernissage:
Friday, 4 October, 6pm – 9pm

General admission:
Saturday, 5 October, 11am – 8pm
Sunday, 6 October, 11am – 8pm



For a pdf copy of our sales catalogue, please click the link below.

 

Installation views


Artworks


CHONG SIEW YING

Chong Siew Ying (b. 1969, Kuala Lumpur) is a Malaysian painter best known for her dynamic gestural brushstrokes and expressive compositions. These paintings embrace broad themes such as nature, human sentiments, human connection, homeland and belonging, as well as references to literary themes and concepts. Chong left Malaysia for France in 1990 to pursue her studies in Fine Art. There, she enrolled at the École des Beaux-Arts de Versailles and later at the Parisian printmaking centre, Atelier63. Returning to Malaysia in 1998, she held her first solo show in Kuala Lumpur in the same year. From 2000–2001, she travelled to the United States of America where she spent 7 months in New York City and 2 months at the Vermont Studio Centre in Vermont. She returned to Paris in 2001 and travelled back and forth between Paris and Kuala Lumpur until 2011. She has since moved back permanently to Kuala Lumpur. Her career has spanned a large number of solo and group exhibitions in Asia, as well as across Europe and the USA.


LIEW KWAI FEI

 

Liew Kwai Fei (b. 1979, Kuantan) is recognised today as among the most exciting new generation of contemporary painters in Malaysia. Spanning over a decade, his practice explores the hybridity of the painting medium and its capacity to communicate ideas spanning class, race, and language to the humbling experience of the unspeakable when we encounter art. In recent years, his painting practice has been concerned with exploring the formal possibilities of both modern and contemporary painting. The idiosyncrasy and hybridity of his styles are also manifested in his playful creations of three-dimensional paintings and modular paintings.

Liew has had twelve solo exhibitions to date, with his thirteenth set to open at Harta Gallery in Kuala Lumpur in November 2024. His work has been collected by institutions such as the National Art Gallery, Kuala Lumpur and the Singapore Art Museum.

Instagram: @liewkwaifei


MARCOS KUEH

 

Stamps were “tiny transmitters” of dominant state ideologies, historical narratives, and cultural values. Long before Borneo was marketed as an exotic tourism spot for adventure seekers, the storyline of a mysterious jungle filled with exotic animals have already been propagated over to the world, innocently bypassing national borders as parasitic visual cues on letters.

Invented by the United Kingdom, it gives clues to how the imagination of the identities of our ancestors were understood incrementally from the perspective of the West — most of the time independent of how the actual narrative of how the locals understand themselves. It is a testament of how biological science, for example, were promoted into dominance over indigenous knowledges and how ideas of hierarchy and commodity permeates subconsciously through the pairing of subject and value.

The woven postcard series is about the alienation of perceived identities. It is about the incompleteness of what it means to not fit into colonial descriptions no matter how hard we try, and attempt to make peace with existing in between self-rejection and self-acceptance.

Marcos Kueh (b. 1995, Sarawak) is a designer who has always had a desire to better understand his place and identity as a Malaysian. He graduated with his Bachelor’s in Graphic and Textile Design from the Royal Academy of Art, The Hague, in 2022. His practice is about safeguarding contemporary legends onto textiles as tools for storytelling, just as the ancestors of Borneo did with their dreams and stories, before the arrival of written alphabets from the West. Currently his artistic research is focused on evoking the presence of colonial narratives in our present-day lives and conjuring new myths of what it means to be an independent country.

In 2022, he was awarded the Ron Mandos Young Blood prize for emerging artists, and his work was acquired by Museum Voorlinden in Wassenaar and Stedelijk Museum in Amsterdam. His work has been included in exhibitions all around the world, including the Indian Ocean Craft Triennial satellite exhibition in Kuala Lumpur (2024), Manifesta 15 Barcelona (2024), and group exhibitions at Galerie Ron Mandos, Amsterdam (2022); Stedelijk Museum, Amsterdam (2022); Museum Voorlinden, Wassenaar (2022); The Back Room, Kuala Lumpur (2017); and UNKNOWN Asia, Osaka, Japan (2017 & 2023). His debut solo exhibition was Kenyalang Circus at The Back Room, KL, in 2023. He currently lives and works in The Hague, Netherlands.

Instagram: @marcoslah


NADIRAH ZAKARIYA

 

This series of photographs delves into the artist’s relationship with idol culture, exploring the complexities of fandom as she navigates the delicate balance between personal joy and global sorrow. Her still life works capture her emotional responses to the world around her, shaped by both personal experiences and current events.

The first piece, “Spring Day In A Box” featuring a McDonald’s BTS promotional meal carton, was created in May 2021, marking her early exploration of what it means to be in the BTS ARMY fandom and its impact on her art and identity. In contrast, the second piece, “Lost Laughters (Louder Than Bombs),” made in June 2024, responds to the tragic news of the death of a child named Ahmed Al-Najjar in Gaza, processing the loss of innocent lives amid ongoing genocide.

Both pieces, instinctively composed at the same location, in the artist’s home, reveal an unexpected yet striking similarity that connects her personal experiences to broader socio-political realities.

Nadirah’s awareness and deep concern of the situation in Palestine has altered her consumer habits and complicated her relationship with the BTS fandom. Their silence on humanitarian issues, despite their advocacy for peace, has created internal conflict for her as a fan.

The two works titled “A Field of Obsession: Save Me I” and “A Field of Obsession: Save Me II” illustrate the tension between the joy derived from fandom and the weight of global turmoil. These pieces also critique the effects of capitalism on fandom culture, as each object or merchandise represented in the works were purchased or received out of a sense of fixation, raising questions about consumerism and its role in shaping her identity as part of the BTS ARMY. This process prompts her to reflect on the para-social dynamics of fandom, examining the one-sided relationships that can develop between fans and idols.

With these staged studies, the artist invites viewers to reflect on the complexities of pop culture devotion in a world marked by conflict, questioning the interplay between personal joy and collective grief.

Nadirah Zakariya (b. 1984, Kuala Lumpur) is a Malaysian photographer who explores the intricate relationship between identity and emotion through her artworks. Her work serves as a personal investigation, capturing the nuances of human experience and the layers of connection that define us. She received her Bachelor’s of Fine Arts from the Fashion Institute of Technology in New York City and is currently based in Kuala Lumpur.

Nadirah's work has been showcased in various notable exhibitions. In 2011, she held her first solo exhibition, Daughters Ago at the Lomography Gallery in New York City. This was followed by another solo show, GIRLHOOD, at the Leica Gallery, Kuala Lumpur, in 2016. In 2018, her series Fuji-san Love Letters was exhibited at ILHAM Gallery, Kuala Lumpur. Most recently, Nadirah presented her largest solo exhibition to date, Feeling Feelings Makes Me, Me, featuring nearly 40 photographic works, at temu house, Kuala Lumpur, in 2023.

As an internationally published photographer, Nadirah's work has appeared in publications including The New York Times Magazine, VICE, Dazed and Confused, Refinery29, and Vogue Italia. In 2022, her artwork was included in Thames and Hudson's Flora Photographica: The Flower in Contemporary Photography, edited by William A. Ewing and Danaé Panchaud.

Nadirah is also the co-founder of Layar Lucida, a women-led creative studio based in Kuala Lumpur, and co-founder of the Exposure+ Photo Festival in Kuala Lumpur.

Instagram: @nadirahzakariya


ONG HIENG FUONG

 

Ong Hieng Fuong (b. 1995, Tanjong Sepat, Selangor) is an emerging artist who is currently pursuing his Master’s in Fine Art at the print-making department at the Sichuan Fine Arts
Institute (SFAI) in Chongqing, China, having previously graduated with his Bachelor’s from the Central Academy of Fine Arts in Beijing. Growing up in a small fishing town where the pace of life is much slower, he got to experience all aspects of daily life to their fullest; these experiences and observations form the major source of his inspiration.

He has received various accolades, most notably being selected for the UOB Painting of the Year Gold Award in the Established Artist Category in 2019, following his selection for the grand prize in the Emerging Artist Category in 2017. Also in 2017, he was awarded the Grand Prize in the Nando’s Art Initiative competition. In 2021, he was an artist-in-residence at the Rimbun Dahan Southeast Asian Art Residency for six months. His debut solo exhibition was That day, I was sketching on the street at The Back Room in 2022.

Instagram: @hieng_9389


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Nomad by Wong Xiang Yi
Sep
22
to Oct 13

Nomad by Wong Xiang Yi

Nomad presents 11 new paintings by Wong Xiang Yi (b. 1987, Kuala Lumpur), in her seventh solo exhibition and her first presentation with The Back Room. These new works see the artist, who specialised in ink painting, continuing in her explorations of the beautiful boy archetype with new developments in style, composition, and figuration from over the past four years. Already established within the Malaysian art scene for her paintings of beautiful, young male models in languid poses, these new paintings present a style of figuration that is more “chibi”-like, allowing the artist to place greater emphasis on nuances in her subjects’ expressions and gestures, instead of on their beauty. 

In the paintings of Nomad, the figures are all ageless wanderers who move in clouds of smoke, connected to each other through a secret truce, a mysterious thread of fate with terms that viewers can only guess at. Xiang Yi combines the fine elegance and elaborate patience of Chinese and Japanese ink painting traditions with the androgynous grace of the “beautiful boy”, the immortal muse of artists and poets since the ancient Greeks. Each painting is a secret, smoke-filled chamber that opens upon a new scene celebrating youth, beauty, and its expressions. 

Using subject matter that is “beautiful, immobile, and cheap” (echoing Georgia O’Keeffe’s rationale for making her flower paintings), the groups of boys are simplified into clones, with each boy being an “avatar” for a different facet of personality. Each tableaux thus becomes a way for the artist to have a private conversation with herself. The boys appear as innocent, blank vessels upon which the viewer can cast their gaze and project without fear, yet their detachment — conveyed through ambiguous and enigmatic expressions — maintains a cold front across all the paintings. Through shifts of expression, gesture, and composition, the pictures keep various subtle tensions and moods in a delicate balance. 


Opening reception: Sunday, 22 Sept from 3pm – 7pm
Exhibition dates: 22 September – 13 October 2024

 

About the Artist

Wong Xiang Yi (b. 1987, Kuala Lumpur) received her Bachelor’s of Fine Arts from the Chinese University of Hong Kong in 2010 and her Master’s of Fine Arts from the Taipei University of the Arts in 2016. 

Wong majored in ink painting, having been trained in traditional Ling Nan Chinese ink painting. Aside from that, notable influences in her work also include the new ink painting movement in China, Japanese style of ink painting (Nihonga), and the discourse surrounding ink painting in Taiwan that she encountered during her Master’s studies. Since returning to Malaysia, she has experimented with combining her learning in ink painting with local visual arts styles, traditional and contemporary (including batik and Islamic painting), in order to develop her own particular style. 

Wong is passionate in matters related to gender studies and her work frequently features the motif of groups of male models, captured through a female gaze. By combining her meticulous and airy style of ink painting with this perspective on male subjects, she attempts to create a unique visualisation of modern intimacy and sensuality. 

Recent exhibitions include Kaleidoscope Japan, an online group exhibition (2022), NAFAS - Emerging Women Artists (2021) at Maybank Gallery in Kuala Lumpur, Survival of the Exceptional (2020) at the Tainan Art Museum in Taiwan, amongst others. Her last solo exhibition was Casually Peeking at Suma Orientalis, Kuala Lumpur, in 2019. Besides that, Wong was selected as the Artist in Residence at Rimbun Dahan in 2019 and she has been featured in the book 100 Painters of Tomorrow by Thames & Hudson, published in 2014. Nomad is her seventh solo exhibition. 


 

Installation shots

Coming soon.


Artworks

Coming soon.

 
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Tiba Anak Cucu by Budi Agung Kuswara
Aug
3
to Aug 25

Tiba Anak Cucu by Budi Agung Kuswara

Budi Agung Kuswara, known to friends as “Kabul”, presents his latest exhibition, Tiba Anak Cucu at The Back Room this August. Translated into English, the Indonesian title means “The Descendants Emerge”. The exhibition is produced in collaboration with Mizuma Gallery.

At the heart of Kabul’s work is the cyanotype, a technique where sunlight exposure transforms photo negatives into distinct blue and white images. It is a technique with a deep sensitivity towards the movements of the sun, articulating a relationship with time, memory, and the past.

In his previous series, Anonymous Ancestors, Kabul delved into the colonial archives to explore the visages of various Balinese women who were left unidentified. These nameless women became subjects of his imagination, becoming dressed in European regalia as a way of reclaiming their agency. In Tiba Anak Cucu, he extends this vision to create a family tree, a genealogy of the descendants of those nameless women. Here, the modus is excess, extravagance, an embrace of the figure of the tycoon as a way of reimagining these descendants as taking back the prosperity that should have been their ancestors’. The result is a blend of traditional Balinese aesthetics with lavish elements to create fantastical legacies, ones which leap out from the canvas with unapologetic flourish.

Through his cyanotypes, Kabul invites us to see the sun not just as a source of light, but as a bridge connecting past and present, a storyteller of untold histories and imagined futures.

Please join us in welcoming Kabul and his works to Kuala Lumpur with an artist talk and opening reception this August 3rd (Saturday).

This exhibition is made possible with the support of PNB Merdeka Ventures and Think City.

Artist Talk: Saturday, 3 Aug, 3:00pm
Malaysia Design Archive, 84B The Zhongshan Building
Moderated by Ong Kar Jin


Opening reception: Saturday, 3 Aug, 5:00pm
Exhibition dates: 3 – 25 August 2024

 

About the Artist

Budi Agung Kuswara (b. 1982, Bali, Indonesia), also known as “Kabul”, is an artist known for his multi-media practice that crosses cyanotype printing, photography, and painting. Kabul graduated with a BA in Fine Art from the Indonesia Institute of Arts (ISI), Yogyakarta, in 2009. Trained in kamasan painting (a traditional Balinese narrative painting style, in the past used to decorate temples and palaces on the island), Kabul retains the intricacy and delicate linework of this traditional art form in his contemporary works. His paintings celebrate the treasury of aesthetic and cultural influences on the Indonesian archipelago, marrying these baroque sensibilities with observations on social tensions and dynamics.

Notable past exhibitions include Repose: Under The Sun at Kiniko Art Room, Yogyakarta, Indonesia (2023); Residual Memory at Mizuma Gallery, Singapore (2021); Arus Berlabuh Kita at the Asian Civilization Museum, Singapore (2018); Love Me in My Batik at ILHAM Gallery, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia (2016); and The Wax on Our Fingers, a collaboration with Singaporean artist Samantha Tio (Mintio) at the Indonesian Contemporary Arts Network, Yogyakarta, Indonesia (2012); and his debut solo exhibition, i.self at Komaneka Fine Art Gallery, Bali, Indonesia (2009). He has also undertaken residencies at Bamboo Curtain Studio, Taipei, Taiwan (2016); Fukuoka Asian Art Museum, Fukuoka, Japan (2012); and TAKSU, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia (2012). Budi Agung Kuswara currently lives and works across Singapore and Bali, where he co-founded Ketemu Project Space, a visual collective and social enterprise with a focus on social engagement.


 

Installation shots


Artworks

Warisan Rahasia di Hutan Kolonial (from the Tiba Anak Cucu series), 2024, Cyanotype, acrylic, ink, and 24K gold leaf on canvas, 140 × 120 cm

Warisan Rahasia di Hutan Kolonial (2024) — Artwork Reference and Narrative

Title: Studioportret van twee vrouwen op Bali
Subject (topical): Balinese Women
Subject (geographic): Bali
Language: No linguistic content
Country: No place, unknown, or undetermined
Published/created: c. 1920

Once upon a time, in a country that was part of a colonial empire, there lived a young woman named Sariti.

Sari grew up in an old house surrounded by a dense forest. One day, as Sari was cleaning the attic, she discovered an old notebook filled with writing. It belonged to her great grandmother, who turned out to be the woman in the photograph. In the notebook, she found a story of her great grandmother who lived during the colonial era and was witness to important events. Her grandmother’s name was Yutinah, a strong and brave woman. She was known as a wise leader and was revered in her community. With her smart wit, she managed to maintain and conserve many traditions and local wisdoms despite being under the oppression of the colonial government. One of the stories recorded in the notebook was how her great grandmother had recovered an ancient map of secret trade routes and sacred places hidden deep inside the forest.

The notebook also recorded how her great grandmother met with strange and amazing creatures depicted in the portrait. There are huge flowers with lion faces that could talk, giant flying fish carrying important messages, and a cherubim that faithfully accompanied and protected her. All of these beings are the guardians of secret, hidden histories of the country. The more Sari read, the greater she felt her connection to her great-grandmother. She felt the calling to continue the duty of her great-grandmother as the keeper of the family’s history and legacy. With the help of the notebook, Sari decided to start her own adventure. She’s determined to unveil more secrets hidden in the forest and ensure that the stories of her ancestors are never forgotten.

In her journey, Sari faced many challenges and met with many strange creatures that could only be seen by the eyes of those of pure heart and sincere intent. With the bravery and wisdom inherited from her great grandmother, Sari succeeded in maintaining and preserving her family’s legacy. She became the new guardian of history and invaluable stories, ensuring that the past lives in the heart and mind of the future generation.

Warisan Kembang Desa (from the Tiba Anak Cucu series), 2024, Cyanotype, acrylic, ink, and 24K gold leaf on canvas, 140 × 130 cm

Warisan Kembang Desa (2024) — Artwork Reference and Narrative

Title: Studioportret van twee vrouwen op Bali
Subject (topical): Balinese Women
Subject (geographic): Bali
Language: No linguistic content
Country: No place, unknown, or undetermined
Published/created: c. 1933

In a lovely small village, during the colonial era, a young woman named Nila lived. She was known as the village flower due to her beauty and elegance. She often modelled in photos for photographers of the colonial era because of her natural beauty and gracefulness in her traditional attire. A famous photograph of her depicted Nila wearing a traditional garment with charming flower decorations, her facial expression holding untold secrets.

Although considered the village flower, Nila did not live an easy life. She lived under the oppression of colonialism, which forced her to adjust to swift social changes. Nevertheless, Nila preserved her dignity and traditional values. She married a kind gentleman and bore him a daughter named Rasa who inherited her beauty and talents, as well as learning valuable lessons from the story of Nila’s struggles.

Rasa grew up to be a tough and smart lady. Like her mother, she was also known for her beauty. However, she was faced with new challenges in the modern era. Rasa not only inherited her mother’s good looks, but also Nila’s fighting spirit and wisdom. Rasa often taught the children in her village of the importance of preserving traditional values, even as times were changing.

Later on, Rasa got married and had a daughter named Nisa. Nisa grew up with the stories of her grandmother, Nila, the village beauty. In the image, Nisa can be seen wearing elegant traditional attire, against a backdrop of lush forests and streaming waterfalls, kept lovely by her family’s efforts in preserving the nature of their village. She posed with all of its abundance.

Warisan Sang Penjual Air (from the Tiba Anak Cucu series), 2024, Cyanotype, acrylic, ink, and 24K gold leaf on canvas, 140 × 130 cm

Warisan Sang Penjual Air (2024) — Artwork Reference and Narrative

Title: Een Javaanse waterdrager
Subject (topical): Javanese Water Distribution
Subject (geographic): Java, Indonesia
Language: No linguistic content
Country: No place, unknown, or undetermined
Published/created: c. 1900

During the colonial era, in a small, enchanting village, there lived a man named Pak Jaya. He was a passionate and honest water vendor. Every day, he made his rounds from door to door, selling fresh water from the nearest mountain spring. Despite struggling beneath the oppression of the occupation, Pak Jaya’s spirit shone through, and he inspired others with his bravery. In this well-kept photograph, Pak Jaya looked dashing in his traditional attire, standing next to the water bucket that symbolised his humble but noble trade.

Pak Jaya had a daughter named Sri, who inherited her father’s courage and bravery. Sri grew up to be a strong and independent lady. Even through the toughest times, Sri always helped her father by taking over some of the work of selling water when Pak Jaya became too old to continue working. Sri was famed for her beauty and wisdom, and people came from far and wide to seek her advice.

One day, a Chinese trader named Mr. Li came to the village to trade. Mr. Li was a kind and honorable man, and he was interested in the local culture. The meeting between Sri and Mr. Li led to the blossoming of a sincere affection. They got married and built a life together, blending their traditions and creating harmonies out of their differences.

Sri and Mr. Li had a daughter named Nias Li. Nias was raised in an environment rich with culture and traditional values from both of her parents. In the modern era, Nias is known as a smart and talented woman, the steadfast guardian of her family’s legacy.

In this painting, Nias can be seen sitting gracefully, enjoying ice cream by the beach. On the table in front of her is a photograph of her grandfather, Pak Jaya, as a reminder of the struggles and sacrifices that brought his descendants to the present day. Nias wears a wide-brimmed hat and a bright yellow dress, the picture of a hopeful, colourful future.

Warisan Rosa (from the Tiba Anak Cucu series), 2024, Cyanotype, acrylic, ink, and 24K gold leaf on canvas, 140 × 130 cm 

Warisan Rosa (2024) — Artwork Reference and Narrative

Title: Studioportret van twee vrouwen op Bali
Subject (topical): Balinese Women
Subject (geographic): Bali
Language: No linguistic content
Country: No place, unknown, or undetermined
Published/created: c. 1920

Rosa, a woman from a small village rich in traditions and culture, is immortalised in a photograph by a colonial-era photographer. The photographer attempted to capture the “exotic” image of the local people for Western audiences. Rosa was dressed in traditional Balinese attire, accompanied by a bottle of brandy held on her head, and a handful of Chinese coins strung on a thread, posing for the camera as directed by the photographer. Despite creating an interesting image, the photograph did not reflect Rosa’s daily life. The photograph was widely distributed and became a symbol of exoticism for its audience in the colonial fatherland.

Rosa had a son named Guntur. Since his childhood, Guntur had learned a lot from his mother regarding bodily hygiene and the importance of preserving his physical health. Rosa taught Guntur on the practices of traditional herbal use, a healthy diet, and the benefits of exercising, taking inspiration from their local culture. Thanks to this, Guntur grew to be a healthy and strong man, as he preserved the teachings of his mother, as well as the traditional values that were passed on to him.

Here is Sura, Rosa’s grandson, the son of Guntur, taking influences from the story of his grandmother and the teachings of his father on hygiene and self-care. As time passed, he became a well-known male model with captivating physical appearance. He values his family legacy and combines it with modern elements in his life.

Sura stands in full confidence, holding his immortalised grandmother, captured in photograph by the colonial photographer. He’s wearing an eye-catching modern attire, with a healthy, muscular body, a testament to the teachings passed on to him by his father and grandmother. In his hand, he holds a big cake that commemorates an important moment in his life.

The family was raised with the philosophical teaching of the East in reining in wild traits to nurture their overall human elegance. A small cherubim, the guardian of memories that reflects a blend of tradition and modernity, at the same time showing the rich culture that was passed on from Rosa to her future generations. Rosa’s grandson is proud of his cultural legacy and continues to honour his grandmother, who, despite once being made into an object of foreign exoticism by a colonial photographer, nevertheless continued to be a symbol of dignity and identification for her family.

 
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Shadows in Time by Joshua Fitton
Jun
29
to Jul 28

Shadows in Time by Joshua Fitton

The Back Room is pleased to announce our upcoming exhibition, Shadows in Time, a solo exhibition by Joshua Fitton. Shadows in Time will be Joshua’s second solo exhibition with the gallery and will feature 13 new ink drawings made with pieces from broken ceramic plates. Using the existing illustrations on the plates — which are all from his own personal collection that he’s amassed over the years, having inherited his father’s interest in history and archeology — as a portal for entry, Joshua creates imaginary worlds that are inspired by his own memories and experiences.

Joshua depicts his world in shards and symbols, drawing on actual places in time that he has had formative experiences in, but also embellishing them with symbols and motifs that render them more faithfully in terms of his subjective experience of them. Hence the anachronism of architectural styles from different periods and nations sitting alongside each other in a single composition, like ruins from classical Greek structures next to stately English country houses, or the curved eaves of Chinese temples adorning a modern shophouse, or a 19th-century German castle that’s the stuff of fairytales appearing in a tropical jungle scene.

Such anachronisms prevail in fact in contemporary architecture, and perhaps arise from the same sentiment for the exotic and extravagant which generated such a craze for chinoiserie in 18th-century Europe. In Joshua’s works, this romantic tendency to borrow elements from other cultures in order to express one’s own sensibility or to tell one’s own stories is only the natural result of the modern condition, with its ease of access to foreign knowledge, experiences, and influences and fluidity of exchange across human societies. Through his work, Joshua also explores questions of storytelling and identity that perhaps trail anyone who has any serious interest in history, attempting in the process not to arrive at any hard truths but instead to make sense of one’s own life and times, as faithfully as one is able to.

This exhibition is made possible with the support of PNB Merdeka Ventures and Think City.

Opening reception: Saturday, 29 June at 6:30pm

Exhibition dates: 29 June – 28 July 2024

 

About the Artist

Joshua Fitton (b. 1987, Bath, England) is a visual artist and fashion designer. He received his MA in Architecture from the University of Lincoln in 2012, following which he pursued a brief career in architecture before founding a menswear atelier called Atelier Fitton, which he continues to operate in The Zhongshan Building, Kuala Lumpur. As an artist, he is known for his work with ceramics, having spent some time in 2019 learning from a raku specialist, and showing a hundred pieces of ceramic eggs for his debut solo exhibition, What Dreams May Come, at The Back Room, Kuala Lumpur, in 2022. In 2023, he was awarded the Tiger Uncage Fund to create a large sculpture crafted out of broken porcelain pieces that was later exhibited at APW Bangsar, Kuala Lumpur. In 2024, he was a participating artist in the second edition of 1000 Tiny Artworks by Artists of SEA at The Back Room, Kuala Lumpur. Shadows in Time is his second solo exhibition to date. 


 

Installation shots

 

Selected artworks

 
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Inventory of Intimacies by Ang Xia Yi, Cheong See Min, and Nia Khalisa
Jun
1
to Jun 23

Inventory of Intimacies by Ang Xia Yi, Cheong See Min, and Nia Khalisa

The Back Room is pleased to announce our upcoming show, Inventory of Intimacies, a group exhibition featuring three emerging Malaysian artists working with textiles: Ang Xia Yi, Cheong See Min, and Nia Khalisa. Within their practices, textiles, found fabrics, and fibres are used as means for recording time and history on a more intimate scale, against the backdrop of grander societal narratives. Represented in the show are a range of textile and fibre mediums, including pictorial patchwork quilting, weaving, and batik drawings. 

Inventory of Intimacies looks at three practices that harness textile’s ability across its diverse sub-practices to capture the fluid and indistinct quality of memory. Less faithful than photography or statistics, less crystallising than language, all of which fix memory in too precise a representation, textiles, by their very nature, convey impressions that appeal to the sensual side of human nature and the soft comfort of nostalgia. 

In Ang Xia Yi’s practice, found fabrics are selected from household fabric stockpiles accumulated over generations or found at old-school fabric shops. Fabrics are selected for the ways they correspond to the fashions of a certain era in her childhood or the youth of her mother, aunts, and grandmother, as gleaned through photographs or through anecdotes shared at home. The fabrics are used to recreate the mise-en-scene of old photographs dug out of the family archives, as sewn patchwork. In the translation of photographs into textiles, not only are old black-and-white photographs transformed into colour, but they also accrue new sentiments through the found fabrics used to create them which, despite their personal significance to Xia Yi, are yet familiar and common enough to evoke memories in anyone. In the translation, like any translation, they also evoke the gap between the artist’s own present with the time of the photographs, and her attempt to reach over it. 

Batik tjap pictures by Nia Khalisa (who goes by “Lisa”), also evoke a sense of nostalgia through the sepia tints of the wax and the faded, rustic appearance of the hand-dyed fabrics that they are printed on. Her imperfect images with ragged outlines and liberal amounts of negative space create a dual sense of serenity and alienation. The subjects of her stamps, which are custom-made according to her drawings, are inspired by creatures, plants, and patterns from her surroundings. A long spell in Indonesia to study art and batik, frequent collaborations with Bon Ton Resort in Langkawi, built on an old plantation site, and frequent day trips into the jungle while back in Selangor keep her in contact with nature. The spaces in her pictures convey a sort of spiritual calm and perfect isolation within nature, but could also be interpreted as a disquieting emptiness by those used to the density of cities. A new line of experiment within her practice are the three hanging pattern chains made of stamped fabric cut-outs cast in resin and linked together, like those mobiles that hang above children’s cots to lull them to sleep. 

Cheong See Min also plays with a sense of incompletion within her practice. Presented in the Inventory are two new woven pieces along with a few smaller, earlier works that are suspended in the space in order that viewers may see the works’ front and back. Many of the works are finished with loose threads at the back, a picture of soft and tantalising disorder to contrast the rigid locked fibres at the front. The yarns have been carefully selected through processes of research and experimentation and many have been dyed using natural pigments derived from plants such as pomegranate, gambir, and tumeric. Research into the properties and histories of the plant inform See Min’s subject matter for the artwork, and vice versa. It is through all these small choices made that the works are realised. Her subject matter is inspired by daily observations of her surroundings and elements in stories told by her friends and family. 

Such practices are a way of forming intimacy with others, even with strangers. The small stories, memories, and impressions that make up a life are woven into the work and are the essence that the works try to express. Like a sewing box, often kept by female members of a family and filled with scraps of fabric, threads, needles, and spare buttons from every single piece of buttoned clothing that every member of the family has ever bought. The exhibition invites thinking into how textiles express notions of memory, personal and shared, and how they can be analysed as documents of time on a human scale, in contrast to documents of photography or writing. The Inventory is an intimate archive, an ordered sewing box (if such a thing could possibly exist), and gaps that are also bridges.


This exhibition is made possible with the support of PNB Merdeka Ventures and Think City. 

Artist Talk with Ang Xia Yi, Cheong See Min, and Nia Khalisa
Date:
Saturday, 1 June 2024
Time: 3pm - 4pm
Venue: Changing Room, 82B The Zhongshan Building
Free entry, no registration needed, open to all

Opening reception: Saturday, 1 June at 5pm

Exhibition dates: 1 – 23 June 2024

 

About the Artists

Ang Xia Yi (b. 1996, Kuala Lumpur) is an artist from Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. Her practice focuses on history, memory, identity politics and the emotional consequences of colonialism, as well as wider issues concerning Southeast Asia. She embraces a mixed-media approach moving seamlessly between photography, drawing, painting and archival intervention using everyday materials such as inherited domestic textiles. Her interest lies in the vernacular aspects of material culture, viewing materials as carriers of intimacy, trauma and violence that transcend beyond generations.

 In 2017, she briefly pursued her BA in Fashion Journalism at Central Saint Martins, London and has previously worked in image- and garment-making. In 2021, she was selected to participate in a residency programme by Openbooks International (Wales) with The Godown (Kuala Lumpur) and China Academy of Art (Hangzhou). Her most recent group exhibitions include Interwoven Realities (2024) at HARTA Space, Kuala Lumpur; Ways Of Seeing (2023) at CULT Gallery, Kuala Lumpur; and 1000 Tiny Artworks (2023) at The Back Room, Kuala Lumpur. 


Cheong See Min (b. 1994, Johor) is a multidisciplinary artist currently practising between Malaysia and Taiwan. See Min's practice interrogates the relationship between human nature and the tropics. She considers weaving an act of communication that mediates between the past and present. Informed by social behavioural observations made during her international travel and residency experiences, See Min's textile works seek to reflect on the boundaries of life, employing tactile materials in an attempt to embody different layers of spatial and experiential narratives.

 See Min holds her BA in Fine Art from Tunghai University and an MA from Tainan National University of Art, Taiwan. She was awarded second runner up for the Nando's Art Initiative (2017), shortlisted for Bakat Muda Sezaman Young Contemporaries (2019) and the International Biennale Exhibition of Micro Textile Art in Scythia, Ukraine (2021). Her works have been shown in galleries and art fairs in Malaysia, Taiwan, Bangkok and Ukraine. Recent residencies include Islands Art Park (Taichung, Taiwan, 2021), Rimbun Dahan (Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, 2022), and Gasworks (London, United Kingdom, 2023).


Nia Khalisa (b. 1995, Selangor), who goes by Lisa, is an artist who explores alternative approaches to art-making, often incorporating craft techniques into her work. In 2019, she spent some time in Indonesia to study Batik Kriya in Surakarta, which led to her present interest in the batik craft. Historically, the humble batik is "a cloth with purpose", and reflects the culture and traditions of the people who practise it. 

 As Batik motifs draw inspiration from its surrounding ecosystem, Lisa similarly adapts the elements and motifs of traditional Batik design towards an expression of her own personal experiences and observations. In her practice, she also experiments with the use of natural dyes and botanical printing. The modest tones of naturally-dyed textiles harmonise gently with her quiet and delicate imagery.

Nia Khalisa graduated with a diploma in Fine Art from the Malaysian Institute of Art in Kuala Lumpur. She has participated in residencies locally and abroad, including a residency in Solo, Indonesia, and at Bon Ton, Langkawi. Recently, she has been conducting batik-making workshops with the tjanting (drawing with a wax drip) and tjap (wax stamping) in Kuala Lumpur.


 

Installation shots

Photos courtesy of Kenta Chai.

 

Selected artworks

 
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wtfing it then omging it by Galih Joha
May
11
to May 26

wtfing it then omging it by Galih Joha

The Back Room is pleased to announce our upcoming exhibition, wtfing it then omging it, a solo exhibition by Yogyakarta-based artist Galih Johar. The exhibition will showcase works from Galih’s ongoing Manipulative Object Alteration (MAO) Project, which sees him modifying everyday objects and turning them into dysfunctional or otherwise non-functional “sculptures” that possess a “broken logic”. 

Galih’s artworks fall more comfortably within the artistic tradition of the “readymade” rather than sculptures, at least in the sense that general audiences might be familiar with. His artworks are made like visual puns or jokes, by taking everyday objects with an immediately recognisable function (like a pair of work boots) and modifying their form in such a way that subverts said function (by turning the work boots into slippers). Thus the object develops a new function in a literal sense (from work boots into slippers), or becomes dysfunctional, but they also adopt the newer function of becoming “art”, with all the ambiguous connotations that such a label might entail. 

Having just emerged from two major achievements in 2023, namely, his first participation in a large institutional show (the group show Voice Against Reason at Museum MACAN) and the mounting of his third solo exhibition (Manunggal at Cemeti Institute for Art and Society), we are excited to be bringing Galih, his works, and his individual sense of humour to our humble gallery this May. 

The exhibition is accompanied by a collaborative zine by Galih Johar and Indonesian curator Grace Samboh, with interpretive texts by Grace Samboh for each of the individual artworks. Linked below.

This exhibition is made possible with the support of PNB Merdeka Ventures and Think City. 

Opening reception: Saturday, 11 May at 5 pm 

Exhibition dates: 11 – 26 May 2024

Exhibition Essays

 

About the Artist

Back in the day, Galih Johar (b. 1990, Yogyakarta, Indonesia) graduated with a major in ceramics from the Institut Seni Indonesia (ISI) in Yogyakarta. At the time, the use of clay had become a daily fixation for him, on the pretext that some of the substances contained in clay formed from soil are the same as those found in the human body, such as calcium, magnesium, ferrum, potassium, and silica. At the time, Galih assumed that perhaps the composition of soil was the result of the decomposition of living things. Over time, he discovered that soil elements were also present in other familiar objects from everyday life. If all things are ultimately material, then many questions arise about the meaning and value of life. From there, Galih Johar started playing around with values, using any available materials for his art. His works are an attempt at expressing his point of view, using a unique visual language. 

Since graduating from ISI in 2017, Galih has had three solo exhibitions: Alterasi at BACKSPACE Art Lab & Museum, Yogyakarta, in 2020; Ruang Rekayasa, Alterasi Chapter Sukabumi at Rumah Mesra, West Java, in 2021; and Manunggal at CEMETI - Institute for Art and Society, Yogyakarta, in 2023. He has participated in group exhibitions, including seeing things at Kohesi Initatives, Tirtodipuran Link Building A, Yogyakarta (2024); Voice Against Reason at Museum MACAN, Jakarta (2023); The Things Are Things Whose Things Do Not Only Mean Things at ACE House Collective, Yogyakarta (2023); and the 13th edition of the Indonesian Contemporary Art and Design showcase at Grandkemang, Jakarta (2023). wtfing it then omging it will be Galih’s fourth solo exhibition and his first time exhibiting in Kuala Lumpur. 


 

Installation shots

 

Selected artworks

 
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Siklus by Octo Cornelius
Apr
6
to Apr 28

Siklus by Octo Cornelius

The Back Room is pleased to present our upcoming exhibition, Siklus, a solo exhibition by Octo Cornelius. A visual artist and woodworker based in Yogyakarta, Indonesia, Octo is known for his assemblages of wood, stone, and other found materials from his everyday surroundings. Siklus presents a number of small assemblages and sculptures created by Octo in his first solo exhibition in Kuala Lumpur. 

The exhibition is curated by Nala Nandana (Bandung, ID) who has chosen the title Siklus (or “cycles”) in reference to ideas of repetition, patterns, and flows. The concept of siklus reflects the nature of various phenomena in the universe, in which things tend to experience cyclical patterns of change and recurrence over time. 

Octo works using found objects that have gone through various types of processing (such as being used previously as furniture or decoration) before they wind up in his hands to be transformed into an artwork. Octo's ideas attempt to provide a narrative for forgotten or overlooked materials, believing that they possess a compelling story and unexpected potential. Through stories of the past retold and dreams of the future realised, the found object can become a symbol of eternity and continued life. A once dead place now resonates with new life, proving that it is possible to rebuild and start again.

This exhibition is made possible with the support of Incopro, The Mogus, PNB Merdeka Ventures, and Think City. 

Exhibition dates: 6 – 28 April 2024
Opening reception: Saturday, 6 April from 5 pm onwards

Talks

Artist talk with Octo Cornelius
6 April, 11 am – 12 pm
Malaysia Design Archive, 84B The Zhongshan Building

A case study of 10 years of creative interventions in the Bandung art scene
A talk by Nala Nandana

6 April, 3 pm – 4 pm
Malaysia Design Archive, 84B The Zhongshan Building

 

About the Artist

Octo Cornelius (b. 1981, Rembang, Indonesia) is a visual artist currently based in Yogyakarta. He was educated at the Institut Seni Yogyakarta (ISI). Octo has had solo exhibitions in Indonesia and Singapore, including "Mengukur Ulang" at C On Temporary, Bandung (2023), "Langkah Tak Berhenti" at Kedai Kebun Forum, Yogyakarta (2020), and "Unpredictable Scenes" at Jogja Contemporary, Yogyakarta (2017). He has participated in group exhibitions and art fairs around the world, including at Para Site Hong Kong, Cemeti - Institute for Art and Society, Art Jakarta, Indonesian Contemporary Art & Design (ICAD), and more. He was previously also an active maker and performer with Papermoon Puppet Theatre.

About the Curator

Nala Nandana (b. 1985, Bandung) is a lecturer in the Department of Film and Television, Faculty of Arts and Design Education, Universitas Pendidikan Indonesia in Bandung and a curator for several art exhibitions and film festivals. Nala is also active in conducting research into cultural studies and new media in various artistic practices.


 

Installation shots

 

Selected Artworks

 
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A Patchwork of Identities by Dexter Sy
Mar
15
to Mar 31

A Patchwork of Identities by Dexter Sy

Dexter Sy, Brand New Day, 2023, mixed media on canvas, 61 × 91.5 cm

A Patchwork of Identities
An essay on the work of Dexter Sy
by Ryan Francis Reyes

The Chinese diaspora has resulted in the formation of distinct identities as a vibrant cultural exchange took place between the Chinese migrants and the various local communities where they settled. In Southeast Asia which is home to the largest overseas Chinese population in the world, the encounter blossomed into ethnicities such as the Peranakans – characterized by a hybrid of ancient Chinese and local cultures of the Nusantara region, further layered with Western influences brought by the region’s colonial history. In the Philippines, they are colloquially known today as the Tsinoys. Though far less in number than people with Chinese ancestry in Malaysia, this group has nevertheless contributed significantly to the shaping of the country’s social, cultural, and economic life. 

The intersection of Chinese and Filipino heritage lies at the heart of Dexter Sy’s art practice. Born to a Chinese father and Filipino mother, the artist constructs his self-identity along these two different cultures. His works on the one hand pay homage to and celebrate the rich legacies of his Chinese and Filipino lineages – acquiring values, traditions, and lifeways from two distinct sources, hence experiencing a diverse upbringing. On the other, he also expresses the difficulties of growing up in a family with a mixed cultural background, at times confronted by a crisis of identity and grappling with a sense of belonging on both sides. As part of a distinct ethnic community, he often deals with expectations, misconceptions, and stereotyping of Chinese-Filipinos, which include being affluent, traditional, and conservative, to name but a few. He challenges these assumptions by juxtaposing Chinese and Filipino symbols and imagery with those drawn from pop culture and other facets of his personality which are seemingly incongruous with the local perception of Tsinoys.  

In this exhibition, Sy revisits his affair with identity crisis and interprets the experience of navigating between two different worlds in a collection of intermedia works. In two-dimensional pieces, he recreates some old portraits – a foremost medium used in recording, idealizing, and immortalizing identities. Faces of individuals and couples dressed in traditional Chinese garb are transformed into highly stylized paintings layered generously with meticulous pen and ink drawings and accentuated by patches of carpets and strands of red threads. In this intervention, individual identities are blurred, and they morph seamlessly into dreamlike, flat compositions in vibrant palette. They become unrecognizable and are woven into tapestries with a sumptuous gathering of visual elements that embodies the pastiche of influences defining the artist’s personal identity. Catholic iconography and Philippine folklore represented by the recurring imagery of the Sacred Heart, Eye of Providence, and monster-like creatures are laid out in an overall composition reminiscent of Chinese folk paintings and a predominantly red color scheme evoking an auspicious symbol in Chinese tradition. 

Sections of these intricate and detailed drawings reappear as large patches in nude figures covered with a constellation of lines, dots, and Chinese texts. These networks indicate meridians in the human body, a key concept in Chinese medicine. While these sculptures give another nod to the artist’s Chinese roots, they can also be symbolic of the confluence of Chinese and Filipino identities in what can be regarded as the ultimate site of identity expression – the body. In these forms, we see the body marked and analyzed according to Chinese knowledge system. At the same time, it is embellished with configurations similar to body paint or tattoos that blend harmoniously with the plotted meridian points and easily turn into nodal regions of the entire anatomy.          

Exhibition dates: 15 – 31 March 2024
Opening reception: Saturday, 16 March from 3 pm – 7 pm

 

About the Artist

Dexter Sy (b. 1979, Manila, the Philippines) graduated with a degree in Fine Arts with a major in Advertising from the Far Eastern University in Manila, where he also currently teaches as a special lecturer. Sy mostly works in two-dimensional media, often combining painting with pen and ink drawing. Characteristics of his work include colourful figures that are rendered and stylised with minute details, such as lines, textures, and patterns drawn from diverse cultural references including pop culture, Philippine folk mythology, and Christian iconography. Through his art, he explores the complexities of identity, memory, kinship, and belonging. 

Sy has had numerous solo exhibitions since 2008, in the Philippines at Kaida Contemporary, UP Vargas Museum, Ayala Museum, West Gallery, Boston Gallery, 1335 Mabini, Artcube Gallery, and Bencab Museum, and internationally at Haslla Art World Museum in South Korea and Centre Intermondes at La Rochelle, France. He has received the Philip Morris Philippine Art Award several times, securing the Jurors’ Choice in 2010 and 2012 and the Grand Prize in 2016.


 

Installation shots

 

Selected Artworks

 
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Folded Lines by Gabriela Giroletti, Laura Porter, Lee Mok Yee, and Mark Tan
Feb
17
to Mar 10

Folded Lines by Gabriela Giroletti, Laura Porter, Lee Mok Yee, and Mark Tan

Folded Lines brings together the works of UK-based artists Laura Porter and Gabriela Giroletti with those of Malaysia-based artists Lee Mok Yee and Mark Tan, spanning 3D and 2D works including sculptures, reliefs, drawings, paintings, and prints. The body of work explores personal and universal interactions with urban environments, man-made materials, and architectural spaces through a process-driven approach to making. All four artists transform shape and form through simple gestures, exploring in-between spaces that feel both static and alive, organic and inanimate. 

Gabriela’s work straddles the space between painting and object, refusing to be confined to the boundaries of the canvas. Through her build-up of layers and colour, her style is characterised by the gradual development of surfaces, which become a hazy field of both micro and macro sensibility, referencing the monumental sensation of being submerged within the landscape and the microscopic beauty that lays the foundation for the natural world. 

Mok Yee explores the organic world through the lens of found and industrial woods. In the works he presents for this exhibition, he tears and layers cork wood—a heavily processed material used in manufacturing and construction—using low-tech processes and elements of chance, in an attempt to capture the natural form of the material, where it exists somewhere between the organic and the man-made. The investigation of material language is expanded upon by combining the cork wood with deconstructed furniture, thinking about how our bodies move and interact with objects and space.

Laura Porter also uses low-tech bodily processes to deconstruct and reconstruct material, cutting down used items of clothing into minuscule fibres and using organic substances that transform the textiles into rigid structures. Combining this ‘new material’ with distorted metal frameworks, she subverts the soft fabric into solid material, and the solid material into something seemingly unstable, challenging our material world and reimagining these forms as quasi-living entities. Thinking about how material consciousness becomes imbued within the fabric of spaces, Laura’s work explores how the body becomes a site of action, and a renewable energy source, whilst referring back to the manufacturing process of the garments themselves. 

Similarly, Mark Tan is concerned with the spaces we inhabit and traverse, exploring the hidden and forgotten moments, the unseen spaces, and the corners in which our consciousness gets lost and found. Taking visual references from these built environments and urban spaces, Mark creates textured surfaces that constantly refer back to the tradition and processes of printmaking and drawing, where the hand of the artist is ever present. 

Folded Lines explores the transformation of materials and forms, and the hand-made processes that are at the root of the artist’s explorations. Against the backdrop of an urbanised, digitised culture, Mok Yee, Mark, Laura and Gabriela choose a physical, slow approach to making, pushing the boundaries of their mediums whilst remaining grounded in the traditions of their craft. 


Text by Laura Porter


Exhibition dates: 17 February – 10 March 2024
Opening reception: Sunday, 18 February from 3–7pm
Artist tour: Sunday, 18 February at 3pm

 

About the Artists

Gabriela Giroletti (b. 1982, Brazil) is a Brazilian painter currently living and working in London. In 2018, she received her MFA in Painting (distinction) from the UCL, Slade School of Fine Art, where she held a position as an Honorary Research Fellow from 2019-20. In 2015, Giroletti graduated with a BA in Fine Arts (first class) from the Middlesex University, London. In 2024, she will have solo presentations in Paris, Palm Beach, and São Paulo. 

Laura Porter (b. 1991, England) is an artist and curator, having studied BA Fine Art at Middlesex University and MA Sculpture at University of the Arts London. Her work has been exhibited across the UK, commissioned by galleries, and shortlisted for awards. Laura is the founding director of Studio KIND. CIC, an artist-led gallery in Devon.

Lee Mok Yee (b. 1988, Klang, Malaysia) is a Malaysia visual artist currently based in Kuala Lumpur. He graduated with a Diploma from the Dasein Academy of Art and a Bacherlor’s in Fine Art from Middlesex University in London. Mok Yee has exhibited in Singapore, France, South Korea, UK and Germany, received awards such as the UOB Painting Award, and has undertaken residencies at Rimbun Dahan and in Arles, supported by the Institut Francaise.  

Mark Tan (b. 1991, Kuala Lumpur) is an artist based in Kuala Lumpur. He received his BA in Drawing and Applied Arts from the University of West England. Mark is one of the recipients of the Khazanah Nasional Residency in 2022/23 and over the years he has exhibited both locally and internationally in Singapore, Indonesia, France, and the UK.


 

Installation shots

Photos courtesy of Laura Porter

 

Selected Artworks

 
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The Back Room at ART SG 2024 / "At the Fair" group exhibition
Jan
4
to Feb 4

The Back Room at ART SG 2024 / "At the Fair" group exhibition

The Back Room at ART SG 2024

The Back Room is proud to announce its first-time participation in a regional art fair at the second edition of ART SG 2024. Located in the FUTURES section at Level 1 of Marina Bay Sands Expo & Convention Centre, the main section of the booth presents works by Antonio Pichillá Quiacaín (GT), Marcos Kueh (MY/NT), and Red Hong Yi (MY), all of whom will be showing large, textile-based works broadly revolving around themes of identity and independence. The booth is anchored by a fluorescent, multi-work woven installation by Marcos Kueh that touches on themes of the postcolonial subject, flanked by textile works by Antonio Pichillá Quiacaín inspired by his indigenous identity, and a new piece by Red Hong Yi on motherhood.

A separate viewing experience is the “back room”, a specially-built corridor at the back of the booth that features a mixed hang of works by Hoo Fan Chon, Liew Kwai Fei, Minstrel Kuik, Ong Hieng Fuong, and W. Rajaie, all of whom represent some of the most promising contemporary artists working in Malaysia today.

In addition, we are working with Marcos Kueh and Galerie Ron Mandos to present “Woven Billboards: Nenek Moyang” by Marcos Kueh, a public art installation from his Kenyalang Circus series for ART SG PLATFORM.

ART SG 2024 Fair dates: 18 January 2024 (VIP Preview & Vernissage), 19 – 21 January 2024 (Public viewing)

Installation shots

Photos courtesy of Esmond Sit


Marcos Kueh, “Woven Billboards: Nenek Moyang” public installation

Photos courtesy of Allen Tan

VIP Preview Day and Vernissage (18 January 2024)

Photos courtesy of Esmond Sit

 

At the Fair

A group exhibition featuring artists on view at The Back Room booth at ART SG 2024

A mixed-hang group exhibition presenting five of the artists exhibiting at our booth at ART SG 2024, namely Hoo Fan Chon, Liew Kwai Fei, Minstrel Kuik, Ong Hieng Fuong, and W. Rajaie.

On view are new paintings by Liew Kwai Fei from his “Gesture. Abstraction. Painting” series (2019—ongoing) and W. Rajaie, along with new prints by Ong Hieng Fuong made during his ongoing studies at the China Central Academy of Fine Arts in Beijing. Minstrel Kuik will be showing her three-part graphite drawing “Durian Queen and Her Reign” from 2022 and Hoo Fan Chon will be showing selections from the Finnish Landscape Painting series, initiated during his residency in Finland in 2022.

Exhibition dates: 6 January – 4 February 2024

Installation shots

 

Selected Artworks

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