Marcos Kueh – "Hunger"
Marcos Kueh – "Hunger"
Hunger
2022
Industrial weaving with recycled PET, 8 colours
225 × 75 cm
Edition 1 of 3 + 1AP
SGD 9,500
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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 presented in art fairs and exhibitions all around the world, including ASIA NOW Fair 2024, Paris, France; ART SG 2024, Singapore; Three Contemporary Prosperities (2022) at Galerie Ron Mandos, Amsterdam; When Things Are Beings (2022) at the Stedelijk Museum, Amsterdam; This Far and Further (2022) at Museum Voorlinden, Wassenaar, Netherlands; Common Threads (2017) at The Back Room, Kuala Lumpur; and UNKNOWN Asia (2017 & 2023), Osaka, Japan. His debut solo exhibition was Kenyalang Circus at The Back Room, KL, in 2023. Recently, he unveiled a nine-part installation under the Hanya Satu Single programme at the National Art Gallery of Malaysia, Kuala Lumpur, in December 2024.
He currently lives and works in The Hague.
Artist Statement
Hunger (2022) is a long, pastel-coloured banner that is inspired by symbolism from the Hungry Ghost Festival, a festival celebrated by Buddhists and Taoists that typically occurs around the autumn season, when it is believed that the presence of spirits are strongest. Believers perform various rituals that help to “guide” the lost souls of their ancestors into a peaceful afterlife. Hunger links the themes of the other artworks to the question of the afterlife and asks difficult questions about customs of filial piety and the life-long tensions these customs can generate between close family members, even unto death.