showcase - RuPé (Ruang Pemula) Artspace
Transcription
showcase - RuPé (Ruang Pemula) Artspace
) 2 5 7 + ( , 0 $ * , 1 $ 5 < 6 3 $ & ( S E L E C T E D S C U L P T U R E S & I N S TA L L AT I O N S F R O M T H E PAK H R U D D I N & FAT I M A H S U L AI M A N C O L L E C T I O N Presented by ) 2 5 7 + ( , 0 $ * , 1 $ 5 < 6 3 $ & ( S E L E C T E D S C U L P T U R E S PAK H R U D D I N & & FAT I M A H I N S TA L L AT I O N S S U L A I M A N F R O M T H E C O L L E C T I O N 1 29 ( 0 % ( 5 ૯ ' ( & ( 0 % ( 5 The Edge Galerie, Kuala Lumpur G5-G6 Mont’ Kiara Meridin, 19 Jalan Duta Kiara, Mont’ Kiara, 50480 Kuala Lumpur Tel: +603-6419 0102 Office: +603-7721 8251 Email: [email protected] | www.theedgegalerie.com CONTENTS 2 Foreword 4 Preface 6 Introduction 10 Sculptures & Installations 14 Artists 72 Index 74 Acknowledgements 76 3 FOREWORD EXPLORATION AND DISCOVERY Describing himself, half in jest, as a “Part Time Art Collector” on his Whatsapp “status”, lawyer Pakhruddin Sulaiman is a keen observer, criƟc and chronicler of the Malaysian art scene. Matching his fervour for local art is his wife, FaƟmah who, like him, is also a lawyer by training, and a volunteer at the Red Crescent Society. Together, they form an inŇuenƟal team whose opinions on local art are keenly sought aŌer by other collectors and the media. Since the 1990s, Pakha, as he is more widely known, and FaƟmah, have been collecƟng Malaysian art with a view to keeping signiĮcant works in the country. It is said that at the Ɵme they started to collect – early works by the MatahaƟ group, Amron Omar and Ahmad Zakii Anwar, among others – their only serious compeƟtor was the Singapore Art Museum, then posiƟoning itself as the centre of Southeast Asian art. But unlike some collectors who equate quanƟty with importance, Pakha and FaƟmah have a discerning eye honed by years on the acquisiƟon trail. They have also culƟvated a grapevine that oīers them invaluable Ɵps on the art scene. Despite not being connected on Facebook, very liƩle of what goes on within the walls of art galleries, studios and aucƟon houses escapes them. What drives them is their “sense of exploraƟon and discovery”. They are criƟcal of what they call the “sheer money muscle” of certain collectors in driving the market up. The downside of that, they say, comes when money supersedes scholarship. Over the years, Pakha and FaƟmah have also established their own art space known as Ruang Pemula, or “RuPé”, located on the outskirts of Kuala Lumpur, below Pakha’s law Įrm in Ampang. The oĸce unit houses the couple’s art collecƟon and equally enormous collecƟon of mostly art publicaƟons. The couple frankly profess to not knowing how many artworks they’ve acquired – they’ve never really counted. They Įnd neither meaning nor joy in the descripƟons, “the biggest or largest collector”. They prefer to grow their collecƟon in non-linear fashion, qualitaƟvely. 4 As a testament of their considered curaƟon, anyone who wants to organise a meaningful exhibiƟon on Malaysian contemporary art usually borrows works from the Pakhruddin and FaƟmah Sulaiman CollecƟon. The RuPé guest book has documented the visits of many collectors, arƟsts, writers, curators, internaƟonal aucƟon house representaƟves and art experts. One well-known collector even describes Pakha as “sifu”. Now in their 50s, the couple keep a look out for upcoming arƟsts whose works resonate with them. But they sƟll can’t resist acquiring yet another Jai (Jalaini Abu Hassan) at The Edge Galerie show or a Bayu Utomo Radjikin or a Wong Hoy Cheong work at aucƟon. While Pakha has a weakness for artworks depicƟng owls, FaƟmah has a fondness for painƟngs of cats. But this is only a whimsical side to their important and serious collecƟon. But it is also their collecƟon of sculptures and installaƟons that characterises their taste in Malaysian art. Largely ignored by other collectors, it is these works that reveal another dimension of local art. For the eternally curious among us, the ensuing essays by Pakha and Rachel Jenagaratnam, the exhibiƟon curator, oīer deeper insight into the selected works. &ŽƌƚŚĞ/ŵĂŐŝŶĂƌLJ^ƉĂĐĞ͗^ĞůĞĐƚĞĚ^ĐƵůƉƚƵƌĞƐΘ/ŶƐƚĂůůĂƟŽŶƐĨƌŽŵƚŚĞWĂŬŚƌƵĚĚŝŶΘ&ĂƟŵĂŚ ^ƵůĂŝŵĂŶŽůůĞĐƟŽŶ, marks the third non-selling exhibiƟon that The Edge is presenƟng at The Edge Galerie. The Įrst was &ĂǀŽƵƌŝƚĞƐĨƌŽŵƚŚĞĂŝŶnjĂŚĂƌŝŽůůĞĐƟŽŶ and the second was ^ĞůĞĐƟŽŶƐĨƌŽŵƚŚĞ^ŝŶDŝŶĂŶĚdŽŽ,ŝŶŐzĞĂƉŽůůĞĐƟŽŶ͘ As part of The Edge Media Group, we conƟnue to oīer art enthusiasts the opportunity to enjoy meaningful artworks from the private collecƟons of Malaysians, to inspire, educate and inform. Ho Kay Tat Publisher & Chief ExecuƟve Oĸcer The Edge Media Group 5 PREFACE FaƟmah and son, Iqbal, with Pakha at RuPé (Ruang Pemula), their art space in Ampang just outside Kuala Lumpur Detail from Memory of Stones 6 COLLECTING FOR THE IMAGINARY SPACE FaƟmah and I do not collect art purely for the walls or space in our house or oĸce. Well, as with most beginners, perhaps this wasn’t the case in the beginning, but it was certainly abandoned and forgoƩen very early on in our hitherto almost 20-year journey in collecƟng art on the Malaysian art scene. We collect art for the imaginary wall or space in our heads—a virtual wall or space that has no limit or boundary, so to speak! Hence the Ɵtle for this inaugural exhibiƟon of selected works from our collecƟon at The Edge Galerie, &ŽƌƚŚĞ/ŵĂŐŝŶĂƌLJ^ƉĂĐĞ͗^ĞůĞĐƚĞĚ^ĐƵůƉƚƵƌĞƐĂŶĚ/ŶͲ ƐƚĂůůĂƟŽŶƐĨƌŽŵƚŚĞWĂŬŚƌƵĚĚŝŶΘ&ĂƟŵĂŚ^ƵůĂŝŵĂŶŽůůĞĐƟŽŶ. As for the Ɵtle, it is interesƟng to note that I had in my essay in tribute to the late art collector-cum-dealer Rahime Harun way back in 2009 already alluded to my intenƟon of using it when we had the opportunity to unveil and exhibit our collecƟon to the public1. The early decision to shiŌ from being bound or circumscribed by a tangible wall or space somewhat helped us solve a major dilemma facing most prospecƟve collectors of art—conƟnuing to collect and Įnding space to display one’s art acquisiƟons beyond the domesƟc walls and space. In this connecƟon, we have oŌen heard collectors lamenƟng the fact that they had either slowed down or totally stopped buying artworks because they had simply run out of walls or space in their homes to accommodate them. To buy or not to buy? This (with necessary apologies to Shakespeare) is indeed a quesƟon that has tormented generaƟons of art collectors past and present and I am sure it will conƟnue to torment new and prospecƟve collectors at one point or another in their art-collecƟng journey. This situaƟon may be especially acute in this country as most people sƟll buy art for their homes and the idea of a private art museum, though commonplace in the West, is preƩy much unheard-of here. As for me and FaƟmah, notwithstanding the lack of space in our home, if the opportunity avails itself, we will just buy the artwork in quesƟon and then worry about where to store it. Necessity being the mother of invenƟon, we created RuPé (Ruang Pemula) in 2004 —a discrete art space to store and showcase a selecƟon of our collecƟon. Of late, other collectors have been equally invenƟve, seƫng up their own “ruang”. In fact, one prominent collector bought a disused shipping container and turned it into addiƟonal storage space for his ever-expanding art collecƟon. I have since been informed that there is also available now commercial and professional art storage space for rent. Given these developments, serious art collecƟon—beyond the domesƟc seƫng—has become much more sustainable. 1. “Sang Pemburu Mimpi” in <ŽůĞŬƐŝ ^ĂLJĂʹZĂŚŝŵĞ,ĂƌƵŶ, 2008, Balai Seni Lukis Negara Kuala Lumpur, page 34. To me, this is an interesƟng and useful “litmus test” of whether someone who buys art has indeed crossed over into the world of serious collectors. In this context, I oŌen tease friends who collect art but are constrained by the walls of their homes that they have yet to pass the litmus test and therefore cannot consider themselves to have arrived as serious collectors on the art scene! 7 If not for the “paradigm shiŌ” early on in our art collecƟng acƟvity, FaƟmah and I would have ceased to collect art a very long Ɵme ago because we quickly ran out of wall space aŌer we began collecƟng earnestly in the early 1990s. And we would not have ended up with a hoard of several hundred pieces, all stored either at RuPé, our home or my oĸce. For this maiden exhibiƟon of works from our collecƟon—the third in the series of The Edge Galerie’s showcase of private collecƟons —we have decided to exhibit only sculptures and installaƟons, although the predominant works in our collecƟon are painƟngs and drawings. Together with Rachel Jenagaratnam, the curator of the exhibiƟon, we have chosen a total of 60 sculptures/installaƟons—less than a third of what we have in our collecƟon. The idea for and intenƟon of this exhibiƟon is to cast the net as wide as possible to demonstrate the sheer range and diversity of the medium in this country. In tandem with that, we also endeavoured to select as many sculptors as possible by limiƟng the number of their works to between one and three each. Of course, this process of selecƟon has its limitaƟons. Hence, in the context of our collecƟon, the exhibiƟon will not do jusƟce to those sculptors whose works we collect so passionately. For example, we have more than 20 sculptures each by Raja Shahriman and Mad Anuar in our collecƟon and a mere two or three cannot project the depth of our collecƟon with respect to two of Malaysia’s most prominent sculptors. REFERENCES 2. Galeri Petronas, 2008, Kuala Lumpur, page 66 from 10 Collectors, Ruang Pemula Sdn Bhd, 2014, page 13 3. Galeri Petronas, 2009, Kuala Lumpur, page 146 4. Quek Tse Kwang, 2010, Singapore, page 152 5. Quek Tse Kwang, 2014, Singapore, page 148 6. The Edge Galerie, 2013, Kuala Lumpur 7. The Edge Galerie, 2014, Kuala Lumpur 8 As for interesƟng anecdotes and moƟvaƟon behind our acquisiƟon of several key sculptures in this exhibiƟon, I am afraid space does not permit me to talk about them here. Furthermore, I have wriƩen quite extensively about them elsewhere and for those readers who are interested, I list below some references: (a) "A Collector’s Adventures In The Malaysian Art World” in TK Sabapathy’s /ŵĂŐŝŶŐ^ĞůĨƐ͗ ^ŽƌĂLJĂdĂůŝƐŵĂŝůʹWŽƌƚƌĂŝƚƐŽĨƌƟƐƚƐ2; (b) "Struggling with the Forbidden – A Collector’s ObservaƟons on the Sculptures of Raja Shahriman" in ZŚLJƚŚŵŽĨƚŚĞϮϭƐƚĞŶƚƵƌLJʹDŽŶŽůŽƋƵĞƐŽĨZĂũĂ^ŚĂŚƌŝŵĂŶϯ; (c) "The Past and The Present In 3 Selected Works by Amron Omar, Mad Anuar Ismail and Sharmiza Abu Hassan” in ϯϬƌƚ&ƌŝĞŶĚƐʹƉƉƌĞĐŝĂƟŶŐ^ŽƵƚŚĞĂƐƚƐŝĂŶƌƚϰ; and (d) Essay by Pakhruddin Sulaiman in ϯϬƌƚ&ƌŝĞŶĚƐϮʹŽůůĞĐƟŶŐ^ŽƵƚŚĞĂƐƚƐŝĂŶƌƚϱ; In a preliminary discussion with The Edge Galerie, I inƟmated my intenƟon to showcase a selecƟon of artworks by one of the country’s prominent contemporary arƟsts in an aƩempt to oīer a proĮle of his works in our collecƟon. This, I thought, would oīer a diīerent Ňavour to the public from the potpourri-like exhibiƟons of our two eminent predecessors at The Edge Galerie: Pak Zain Azahari’s &ĂǀŽƵƌŝƚĞƐĨƌŽŵƚŚĞĂŝŶnjĂŚĂƌŝŽůůĞĐƟŽŶϲ and the Toos’ ^ĞůĞĐͲ ƟŽŶƐĨƌŽŵƚŚĞ^ŝŶDŝŶΘdŽŽ,ŝŶŐzĞĂƉŽůůĞĐƟŽŶϳ. However, that intenƟon was abandoned when it dawned on me and FaƟmah that an exhibiƟon that was diīerent from the previous two yet sƟll challenging would comprise only sculptures and installaƟons. Here, I thought, was a great opportunity not only to unveil to the public a selecƟon of our quite considerable collecƟon of these 3D objects but also to change common misconcepƟons about the appreciaƟon and collecƟon of sculptures in this country. MISGUIDED VIEW When it comes to sculptures, there is this belief among connoisseurs of Įne art, not just in this country but also in the West, that they are a lesser form of art (and therefore of lower standing) than painƟngs or drawings. Similarly, drawings are considered inferior to painƟngs. Now this view —a misguided one, if you ask me —appears to have greater inŇuence on the general public, including collectors of art. This misconcepƟon has, in turn, been perpetuated by collectors who tend to subscribe to the idea, thinking that this is the convenƟonal wisdom regarding art. Perhaps, this is one of the main reasons sculptures are not as popular as painƟngs and drawings with collectors and are considered the poor cousins of the laƩer. Sculptures, being 3D objects, are seen as much more diĸcult to understand and appreciate as well as problemaƟc to display at home or the oĸce. However, from the perspecƟve of those who collect sculptures/installaƟons, this poor cousin status is a boon. First, it helps keep the prices of sculptures relaƟvely low compared with those of painƟngs and second, there is much less compeƟƟon and hence no ugly clamour among collectors for sculptures at exhibiƟons, which is usually the case nowadays when it comes to painƟngs by the more popular arƟsts, young and old. So, from my experience, collecƟng sculptures is quite hassle free. With the holding of this exhibiƟon, FaƟmah and I earnestly hope that in our own small way, we have been able to help promote and elevate sculptures and installaƟons to their rightful place—on par with painƟngs and drawings. In the process, we hope that the prevailing negaƟve mindset with regard to collecƟng sculptures and installaƟons turns posiƟve. In my recent essay for the DĂůĂLJƐŝĂŶƌƚ&ƌŝĞŶĚƐϮ exhibiƟon catalogue8, I wrote about the breaking down of the metaphorical “Reluctant Wall” —a general reluctance among collectors in this country to show and share their art collecƟon with members of the public-- and hope that a similar reluctant wall viz-à-viz treaƟng sculptures and installaƟons as equally as painƟngs and drawings will ulƟmately be torn down. Our art collecƟon has indeed—for the last two decades—consumed our lives but it has been a most wonderful, enjoyable and rewarding experience and journey for us. And now, thanks to The Edge Galerie, we have been given the opportunity to showcase 60 of our sculptures and installaƟons to the public at large. 8 “Malaysian Art Friends and the Breaking Down of the ‘Reluctant Wall’” in DĂůĂLJƐŝĂŶƌƚ&ƌŝĞŶĚƐϮ ʹ^ĞůĞĐƚĞĚtŽƌŬƐĨƌŽŵ ϭϬŽůůĞĐƚŽƌƐ, Ruang Pemula Sdn Bhd, 2014, page 13 Pakhruddin Sulaiman Ruang Pemula (RuPé) 24 October 2014 9 INTRODUCTION UP CLOSE AND PERSONAL WITH SELECTED SCULPTURES FROM PAKHRUDDIN AND FATIMAH SULAIMAN’S COLLECTION Working with art collectors is an interesƟng ball game for a curator. For one, such an endeavour is bound to become personal. Art collectors pour their own feelings into the mix, adding idiosyncraƟc behaviour and stories to the selecƟon and should anything, God forbid, go wrong, they take it very personally. But aren’t private art collecƟons just that, personal? In many ways—and this is certainly applicable to the larger collecƟons—the artworks in a personal collecƟon funcƟon very much like friends or extended family to the collector. And emoƟons cannot be discounted from the picture. AŌer all, some artworks would have been in the collectors’ possession for decades and usually have a signiĮcant meaning to their owners. Case in point: Pakhruddin and FaƟmah Sulaiman, a couple with two decades of art collecƟng under their belt and whose humble early eīorts have grown over the years into a life-encompassing aīair. Today, with over hundreds of works under their custody —a mélange of modern and contemporary Malaysian art—theirs is one of the country’s largest private collecƟons and one that reŇects their keen eye and dedicaƟon. For The Edge’s ongoing theme of showcasing selected works from private collecƟons, Pakhruddin and FaƟmah have, interesƟngly, decided to focus on sculptures, a medium that hasn’t enjoyed the same kind of popularity and demand as painƟngs but which possesses strengths that are no less alluring or signiĮcant. THE SCULPTURES To pick out the works for the exhibiƟon, we—Pakhruddin, FaƟmah, Johnni Wong of The Edge and myself—assembled one quiet Saturday morning at RuPé, the couple’s unoĸcial art space in Ampang, and aŌer we had circled the enƟre space twice, about 95% of the works had been picked. Pakhruddin later added a handful of sculptures to the list, bringing the Įnal count to 60. 10 This is a large number—why, sculptures don’t even feature in some private collecƟons—and indeed Pakhruddin and FaƟmah had to restrain themselves and reduce the number of artworks desƟned for the show. What you see today is a mere drop in the ocean. RuPé houses a lot more sculptures that are awaiƟng their turn to be in the spotlight. Apart from that, we also made a conscious eīort to avoid too many arƟst duplicaƟons, aiming to oīer variety and breadth in the Įnal exhibiƟon. Breadth was also apparent in the number of catalogues that the couple extracted from their equally impressive collecƟon of art publicaƟons for research. And poring over them—all as prisƟne as the day they came oī the prinƟng press—that personal aspect again became evident. There were catalogues from the 1990s with the arƟsts’ signatures sƟll intact and furthering the personal eīect were calendars daƟng back to 2000 that featured the artworks from the couple’s collecƟon and included the personal annotaƟons of appointments. The personal sense extends to the artworks as well, each a signature of its maker and the physical encapsulaƟon of the arƟst’s thoughts and beliefs. The themes of cultural or personal idenƟty can be seen in works like Anurendra Jegadeva’s The Line and Chang Yoong Chia’s painted shells, which feature self-portraits of the arƟst and his wife. Some others take on a more allegorical or playful form, as Sharon Chin’s works from her Monster series, Umibaizurah Mahir’s ceramic toys that form part of a larger installaƟon, Azahari Khalip’s ChapaƟ Man and Nur Hanim Khairuddin’s Grimoire. Can religion or poliƟcs be considered personal? Certainly. Mohd Faizal Ramli demonstrates the former in Siri Dialog: Iradat Tuhan while the metal sculptures of ZulkiŇi Yusoī —whose installaƟon works in the 1980s catapulted him to fame—carry a social message. A similar socio-poliƟcal Ňavour can be found in Paiman’s The Fake ICs. 11 What’s highly personal about sculptures —three-dimensional objects that they are—is their form. Subtle curves of a wooden piece can elicit meaning or movement as will a cast of shadows that play against a wall. Sculptures in the show that nestle within this category include Abdul Multhalib Musa’s two pieces or Azman Ismail’s Ku Genggam Merdeka, a Ňoor-based piece that forces the viewer’s line of vision to mirror its spiralling curves. In Sharmiza Abu Hassan’s Alegori I: HaƟ Nyamuk, acquired from her 2004 exhibiƟon at the now-defunct Galeri Seni Maya, our vision traces both the sculpture itself and the shadows that it throws on the walls. The argument of form extends further in works like Ramlan Abdullah’s Tee Oī with the geometric lines of its aluminium pieces. In Rosli Zakaria’s Pregnant Series—an amalgamaƟon of found objects to create a pregnant Įgure—the curves are less linear. The aforemenƟoned examples don’t always fall within the classical sense of what a sculpture is, although there are pieces in the exhibiƟon that Įt the deĮniƟon. Works by Terri Law, Heng Eow Lin, Bayu Utomo Radjikin and Chin Wan Kee are all classic bronze creaƟons. You also have Tengku Sabri’s wooden sculptures and Tan Chin Kuan’s aluminium take on the male and female forms. But there are also arƟsts, for example Mohd Faizal Ramli and Rosli Zakaria, who obviously were not medium-monogamous in their studios. For an idea of what a sculpture can be, we have the very modern duratron lightbox of Roslisham Ismail, aka ISE. It is a work that stands in sharp contrast to the primiƟvism and raw expressions of Azahar Manan’s Two Masks or even Mad Anuar Ismail’s seminal Storm Riders 7, which is a grand sculpture that features welded steel boatmen charging through an invisible storm. Just like the variety oīered by the sculptures, there is diversity in the line-up of arƟsts. Some are sculptors and sculptors alone while others have traversed across diīerent mediums in their careers. In terms of the former, Raja Shariman Įts the bill the best, parading works from three diīerent periods in his career that give us a glimpse of the arƟst’s evoluƟon in style. 12 Such career introspecƟons are also present in Ahmad Shukri Mohamed’s Incubator Series: Muse—a sprawling installaƟon of Įbre-glass eggs that are a world away from the painƟngs that have dominated his career. THE COLLECTOR AS CURATOR It seems apt to end this invesƟgaƟon into the exhibiƟon of selected sculptures from Pakhruddin and FaƟmah’s collecƟon with Juhari Said’s sardonic jab at art criƟcism. The Art CriƟc—a work that has physical qualiƟes that don’t exactly indicate ŇaƩery—was one of the pieces that were added to the fray aŌer the visit to RuPé and when Pakhruddin pointed that out at a later meeƟng, he sniggered at the reference to the very criƟc whom the work pokes fun at. Pakhruddin’s harmless humour is like an inside joke, but really it is inside knowledge and the work’s meaning does hold some weight; the criƟc in Paiman’s work is a grotesque Įgure with textures that seem to scream of decay and diminishment and it speaks posthumously of the situaƟon today. Where is the Malaysian art criƟc? Where are the curators? We inhabit an interesƟng art landscape where the two aforemenƟoned roles are lacking, but in their place is a salient crew of collectors who have unoĸcially taken on their tasks with gusto. Pakhruddin and FaƟmah are formidable examples and in the case of this exhibiƟon and their other eīorts (namely the Art Friends project), one would be hard-pressed to disagree that they are curators in their own right. These are two individuals who make their art personal. And in that, our art scene is not lacking. Rachel Jenagaratnam Kuala Lumpur October 2014 13 14 SCULPTURES & INSTALLATIONS 15 Abdul Multhalib Musa, By Default, 2002, Steel, 195cm x 85cm, laser-cut mild steel plates 16 Abdul Multhalib Musa, Centrifugal ±20°, 2005, 120cm x 120cm x 75cm, mild steel with clear enamel coat 17 Abdul Multhalib Musa, Involute Study No. 6, 2005, EdiƟon AP, 61cm x 61cm, digital print on canvas 18 Ahmad Shukri Mohamed, Incubator Series: Muse, 2003, Size Variable; Įbre glass (31 units) 19 Anurendra Jegadeva, The Line, 2001, 25cm x 34cm x 15cm, painted found object 20 Anurendra Jegadeva, Jesus’ Tools, 2005, 19cm x 49cm x 9cm, painted found object 21 Azahar Manan, Two Masks, 1996, 150cm x 41cm x 14cm (leŌ) & 164cm x 38cm x 14cm (right), carved wood 22 Azahari Khalip, ChapaƟ Man, 2006, 132cm x 52cm x 20 cm, acrylic on painted wood 23 Azman Ismail, Ku Genggam Merdeka, 2007, 107cm x 83cm x 40cm, mixed media 24 Bayu Utomo Radjikin, Growing, EdiƟon 5/5, 2004,23cm x 20cm x 44cm, aluminium & brass powder reinforced with resin 25 Chang Yoong Chia, MW & Self-Portrait with Whiskers, 2006, 1.8cm x 1.8cm x 0.8cm & 1.8cm x 1.7cm x 0.8cm, oil on seashells 26 Chang Yoong Chia, Cochlea II, 2005,15.5cm x 15.5cm, oil and snail shells on wooden board 27 Chin Wan Kee, The Familiar Stranger No: 21, 1997, 39cm x 33cm x 30cm, bronze 28 Chin Wan Kee, The Familiar Stranger No: 50, 1999, 50cm x 18cm x 15cm, bronze 29 Heng Eow Lin, The Reader, 1987-1988, 29cm x 72cm, mixed media 30 Juhari Said, Portrait of the Art CriƟc, 2007, 50cm x 54cm, latex mask 31 Juhari Said, Laga, 2006, 232.5cm x 45.5cm x 8cm, carving and oil on woodblock 32 Juhari Said, Taji, 2006, 239cm x 44cm x 8 cm, carving and oil on woodblock 33 Mad Anuar Ismail, Storm Riders 7, 1994, 214cm x 94cm x 112cm, welded steel 34 Mad Anuar Ismail, Telur Kencana 1, 1986, 78cm x 28cm x 24cm, wood 35 Mad Anuar Ismail, Storm Riders Studies (Diptych), 1994, 104cm x 129cm,. mixed media on paper 36 Mohd Faizal Ramli, Siri Dialog: Iradat Tuhan, 2007, 110cm x 55cm x 8 cm, mixed media on wood 37 Nur Hanim Khairuddin, Grimoire, 1996, 34.5cm x 26.5cm x 9cm, mixed media 38 Paiman, MigraƟon,1995, 172cm x 49cm x 9cm, mixed media on wood 39 Paiman, The Fake IC’s, 1996, 178cm x 153cm x 3cm, mixed media on wood 40 Ramlan Abdullah, Tee Oī, 2003, 122cm x 122cm x 15 cm, graphite on aluminium 41 Ramlan Abdullah, Monument of Freedom, 1998, 222cm x 46cm x 46cm, metal & glass 42 Raja Shahriman, Nafas 34, 2004, 73cm x 43cm x 73cm, metal 43 Raja Shahriman, Gembala, 2007, 230cm x 30cm x 54cm, metal and kijang (deer) horns & skull 44 Raja Shahriman, Killing Tool No. 4, 25cm x 110cm x 23cm, metal 45 Raja Shahriman, Nafas Drawing 31, 2004, 76cm x 53cm, charcoal, ink & paint 46 Raja Shahriman, Nafas Drawing 32, 2004, 76cm x 53cm, charcoal, ink & paint 47 Raja Shahriman, Nafas Drawing, undated, 35cm x 17cm, pencil on paper 48 Roslisham Ismail a.k.a ISE, Single Fighter No 1, 2012, 102cm x 81cm, duratran lightbox 49 Rosli Zakaria, Pregnant Series, 1993, 151cm x 41cm x 38cm, metal & found objects 50 Rosli Zakaria, GunƟng Dalam Lipatan... Bagai Pahat Dengan Pemukul…. Bagai Lembu Dicucuk Hidung…Belakang Parang Kalau Diasah, 2008, 70cm x 120cm x 20cm, metal, wood & found objects 51 Sharmiza Abu Hassan, Alegori 1: HaƟ Nyamuk, 2004, 65cm x 40cm x 20cm, steel, magnifying glass, wire mesh, copper tubing & shadow 52 Sharmiza Abu Hassan, Alegori Ledang Study, 2004, 47cm x 37cm, Charcoal & Silver Ink on Paper 53 Sharmiza Abu Hassan, Nur Pintu HaƟ (Diptych), 1998, 123cm x 30cm x 15cm (x2), copper, wood & metal 54 55 Sharon Chin, Monsters - Ghoul (Japan), 2002, 58cm x 38cm, colour pencil & digital print on paper wooden box Sharon Chin, Monsters - Headless Ghost (China), 2002, 73cm x 54cm, colour pencil & digital print on paper wooden box Sharon Chin, Monsters - Gargoyle (Europe), 2002, 78 x 43cm, colour pencil & digital print on paper wooden box 56 Sharon Chin, Monsters - Unicorn (Europe), 2002, 74 x 93cm, colour pencil & digital print on paper wooden box Sharon Chin, Monsters - ManƟcore (Europe), 2002, 64 x 92cm, colour pencil & digital print on paper wooden box 57 Sharon Chin, Killing Jars: City Scurvy, 2005, 30cm x 21cm x 13cm, acrylic on glass Sharon Chin, Killing Jars: Lover, 2005, 30cm x 21cm x 13cm, acrylic on glass and windshield fragments 58 Sharon Chin, Killing Jars: No Substance, Disc 1 and Disc 2, 2005, 30cm x 21cm x 13cm, acrylic on glass Sharon Chin, Killing Jars: Dream, 2005, 30cm x 21cm x 13cm, acrylic on glass and acetate sheet 59 Tan Chin Kuan, Male and Female, 1994, 35cm x 30cm, Aluminium 60 Tengku Sabri, The Warrior, 1988, 62cm x 52cm x 35cm, wood 61 Tengku Sabri, Column XV (Seri Sarawak), 1992, 206cm x 24cm x 201cm, wood 62 Tengku Sabri, Study for Column XV, 1992, 53cm x 7cm x 7cm, wood 63 Terri Law, Echoes of the Past, 2001, 35cm x 10cm x 6cm bronze, wood & Įllings 64 Umibaizurah Mahir @ Ismail, The Sky House, 2014, 38cm x 99cm x 14.5cm, ceramic & mixed media 65 Umibaizurah Mahir @ Ismail, Toys (Gerabak), 2006-2007, 186.5cm x 300cm x 14cm, ceramic, wood, wheel, concrete, screw & steel rod 66 67 ZulkiŇi Yusoī, Yang Arif, 2001, 101.5cm x 35.6cm x 20.3cm, steel 68 ZulkiŇi Yusoī, PemerhaƟ, 2001, 96.5 x 20.3 x 20.3cm, steel ZulkiŇi Yusoī, Sherif Masuk Penjara, 2001, 35.6cm x 17.7cm x 17.7cm, steel 69 ZulkiŇi Yusoī, Kebodohan, 2001, 40.6cm x 68.6cm x 25.5cm, steel 70 ZulkiŇi Yusoī, Miang, 2001, 28cm x 76.2cm x 17.7cm, steel 71 ARTISTS 72 Abdul Multhalib Musa Ahmad Shukri Mohamed Anurendra Jegadeva Azahar Manan Azahari Khalip Azman Ismail Bayu Utomo Radjikin Chang Yoong Chia Chin Wan Kee Heng Eow Lin Juhari Said Mad Anuar Ismail Mohd Faizal Ramli Nur Hanim Khairuddin Paiman Ramlan Abdullah Raja Shahriman Roslisham Ismail a.k.a ISE Rosli Zakaria Sharmiza Abu Hassan Sharon Chin Tan Chin Kuan Tengku Sabri Terri Law Umibaizurah Mahir @ Ismail Zulkifli Yusoff 73 INDEX Alegori 1: Hati Nyamuk 52-53 Alegori Ledang Study 53 By Default 16 Chapati Man 23 Centrifugal ±20° 17 Cochlea II 27 Column XV (Seri Sarawak) 62 Echoes of the Past 63 Gembala 44 Grimoire 38 Growing Edition 5/5 25 Gunting Dalam Lipatan... Bagai Pahat Dengan Pemukul…. Bagai Lembu Dicucuk Hidung…Belakang Parang Kalau Diasah 51 Incubator Series: Muse 19 Involute Study No. 6 18 Jesus’ Tools 21 Kebodohan 70 Killing Jars 58-59 (ii) Killing Jars: City Scurvy (iii) Killing Jars: Lover (iv) Killing Jars: No Substance; Disc 1 and Disc 2 (v) Killing Jars: Dream Killing Tool No. 4 45 Ku Genggam Merdeka 24 Laga 32 Male and Female 60 Miang 71 Migration 39 Monster Series - (a) Monsters - Ghoul (Japan) - (b) Monsters - Headless Ghost (China) - (c) Monsters - Gargoyle (Europe) - (d) Monsters - Unicorn (Europe) - (e) Monsters - Manticore (Europe) 74 56-57 Monument of Freedom 42 MW & Self-Portrait with Whiskers (2006) 26 Nafas 34 43 Nafas Drawing 48 Nafas Drawing 31 46 Nafas Drawing 32 47 Nur Pintu Hati 54-55 Pemerhati 69 Portrait of the Art Critic 31 Pregnant Series 50 Sherif Masuk Penjara 69 Single Fighter No 1 49 Siri Dialog: Iradat Tuhan 37 Storm Riders 7 34 Storm Riders Studies (Diptych) 36 Study for Column XV (wood) 63 Taji 33 Tee Off 41 Telur Kencana 1 35 The Fake IC’s 40 The Familiar Stranger No: 21 28 The Familiar Stranger No: 50 29 The Line 20 The Reader 30 The Sky House 65 The Warrior 61 Toys (Gerabak) 66-67 Two Masks 22 Yang Arif 68 75 Organised by G5-G6, Mont’ Kiara Meridin 19, Jalan Duta Kiara, Mont’ Kiara 50480 Kuala Lumpur Te+603 7721 8251 / +603 6419 0102 Email: [email protected] EXHIBITION PERIOD: 19 November -19 December, 2014 DESIGN BY The Edge Communications Sdn Bhd PHOTOGRAPHY BY Kenny Yap Arif Fauzan Chang Yoong Chia Puah Chin Kok PRINTED BY Percetakan Zanders Sdn Bhd Copyright © 2014 The Edge Communications All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced or transmitted. Or published in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopy, recording or any information storage and retrieval system, without permission in writing from the copyright owner. COVER Mad Anuar Ismail, Storm Riders 7, 1994, 214cm x 94cm x 112cm, welded steel 76