| Galerie Michael Janssen Berlin: FLOW - Indonesian Contemporary Art (curated by Rifky Effendy) - 9 June 2012 to 14 July 2012 Current Exhibition | ||||
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J. Ariadhitya, Pramuhendra, Vest of violence, 2011 Charcoal on canvas, 200 x 145 cm Courtesy Galerie Michael Janssen, Berlin | |||
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| FLOW - Indonesian Contemporary Art (curated by Rifky Effendy) Agung Kurniawan Erianto Yuli Prayitno Titarubi Dita Gambiro J. Ariadhitya Pramuhendra Erika Ernawan and Erik Pauhrizi Melati Suryodarmo Yusuf Ismail Galerie Michael Janssen, Berlin June 9 - July 14, 2012 Opening Friday, June 8, 6 - 9 p.m. On Friday, June 8 from 6 to 9 p.m., Galerie Michael Janssen will be presenting Flow - Indonesian Contemporary Art, a group exhibition curated by Rifky Effendy with works by established as well as emerging Indonesian artists whose practices range from painting, sculpture, installation, performance and video. Agung Kurniawan (*1968) reproduces family and press pictures with iron bars mounted directly on the wall. Reminiscent of trellis used as support for climbing plants the metal bars overlap with their own shadows and constitute a poetic statement about the fragility and vagueness of memories and offer a path to fragments of past actualities. Erianto’s (*1983) trompe l’oeil paintings are created with a meticulous hyperrealist technique and resemble cardboard packages and wooden crates used to transport artworks. They make reference to the social realm of Indonesian art and its relation to the global art market pushing the boundaries of what painting can be. Yuli Prayitno’s (*1974) installations and sculptures confront social issues such as gender and identity through a hybrid and humorous remix of forms and signs. In their unusual form of fetishism they recall Dadaist and Surrealist western avant-gardes and transform reality into staged scenarios. Titarubi (*1968) reflects a passionate concern over problems of society through various mediums and creative paradigms. With the body as the main focus of her practice her oeuvre addresses the evolution of female self-perception. In her practice Dita Gambiro (*1986) talks about different issues around her - a young woman experiencing contemporary urban culture in Indonesia. Her objects of braided synthetic hair and brass address the ambiguity related to domestic life and human relationships. Melati Suryodarmo (*1969) creates powerful images captured and reiterated in long time performances that combine the ancient and the modern, the traditional pride and the condition of women in Indonesian society today. She creates icons that excavate the most intimate and atavistic origin of women’s instincts and seem to give a new role and meaning to the "feminine". In his videos Yusuf Ismail explores various aspects of comedy and the humorous. His work often makes use of popular idioms from information technology circles and mass media. By using humor as a strategy, he delivers criticism and makes fun of certain sociological situations in which patterns of contemporary society have changed with the development of information technologies. Influenced by his biographical interests J. Ariadhitya Pramuhendra’s (*1984) charcoal paintings explore the conception of the philosophical "self" and present momentary petitions for recognition by constantly emphasizing on re-assessing the "self" in relation to what constitutes identity, the moral and social in contemporary Indonesia. Parallel to their individual practices Erika Ernawan (*1986) and Erik Pauhrizi (*1981) share a collaborative work based on issues of the involvement of the body. Their different experiences and backgrounds provide a challenge in making a collective body of work in which the transfer of life experiences and the physical body are the themes they foster and explore. For further information please contact: Fabio Pink, [email protected] Tel: +49 (0)30 259 272 50, Fax: +49 (0)30 25 927 2518 | ||||
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