Singapore Art Museum
Medium at Large explores the idea of medium in contemporary art, probing some of the most fundamental and pressing questions of art – its making, and also our experience, encounter and understanding of it. The year-long exhibition at Singapore Art Museum revels in the rich expanse of materials that contemporary artworks can be made of, and from, with artwork media ranging from oil paint to rattan, human hair, live bullet shells, as well as 'dematerialised' media like sound and language. The exhibition also scrutinizes the very 'slipperiness' of medium as once-stable categories and genres begin to slide into one another. Medium at Large draws largely from our permanent collection, and also includes loans and commissions from Singaporean, Southeast Asian, and Asian artists. Across 32 artworks, the exhibition probes and ponders the fluid – if ever-elusive – nature of art: of art's medium, at large.
Song-Ming Ang
You and I (2009 – 2012)
Nadiah Bamadhaj
Quiet Rooms (2009)
Annie Cabigting
On the Shelf, On the Shelf (After Michael Craig-Martin) (2010)
Chen Sai Hua Kuan
Space Drawing 5 (2009)
Heman Chong
The Forer Effect (2008)
Chua Chye Teck
April 2008, Tokyo (2009)
Osang Gwon
BluRay_B (2009)
Ho Tzu Nyen
The Cloud of Unknowing (2011)
Mella Jaarsma
Shaggy (2008)
Ranbir Kaleka
He Was A Good Man (2007 – 2008)
Torlarp Larpjaroensook
Bookshelf (2011)
Jane Lee
Status (2009)
Mit Jai Inn
Untitled (2014)
Alan Oei
The End of History (2008 – 2013)
Nipan Oranniwesna
Let Us Progress Towards... (2009)
Renato Orara
Bookwork: NIV Compact Thinline Bible (page 403) (2008)
Gary-Ross Pastrana
Echolalia (2009)
Sopheap Pich
Cycle (2004 – 2008)
Melati Suryodarmo
Exergie – Butter Dance (Sao Paolo) (2000)
Tan Gerardo
thisisthatisthis (2001)
thatisthisisthat (2001)
The Artists Village
Public Art Library (2003)
Titarubi
Shadow of Surrender (2013)
Tran Luong
Steam Rice Man (2001)
Natee Utarit
The Birth of Tragedy (2010)
Wong Hoy Cheong
The Charity Lady (After Jean-Baptiste Greuze's La Dame de Charite, 1775) (2009)
Ian Woo
Lot Sees Salt: First Heart
Lot Sees Salt: Head
Lot Sees Salt: Neck
Lot Sees Salt: Wing (2009)
Ye Shufang
Project: Honey Sticks (6,425) (2014)
Alvin Zafra
Pepe (2008)
Marcial Bonifacio (2006)
Zulkifle Mahmod
Sonic Encounter (2013)
2014
installation with 6,425 honey sticks
This installation comprises 6,425 honey sticks—the significance of the number lying in the fact that there were 6,425 registered births in 1941, the year that the artist’s parents were born. With each birth and the beginning of new life is the attendant notion of the passage of time, and death, although these unpleasant and uncomfortable realities are seldom contemplated or acknowledged.
Project: Honey Sticks (6,425) extends artist Ye Shufang’s use of ready-mades and her interest in the ephemeral through the use of perishable materials. Visitors are invited to take and consume the honey sticks from the dispenser, experiencing the viscosity and the intensity of flavour on their tongue. With visitor participation over time, the level of honey sticks will gradually fall and the vibrant colour of the work slowly drains away, until all that is left is an empty container, standing solitarily like an epitaph.
2008
hair, hair curlers
Mella Jaarsma is best known for her costume installations which use materials such as animal skins, horns and clothing—items charged with metaphoric potencies of race, identity, human nature, sexuality beliefs, politics and origins.
In her work Shaggy, Mella Jaarsma takes on hair as a symbol of womanhood, and all its attendant associations with eroticism, gender stereotypes and identity. The inspiration for this piece came from the artist's observation that during a certain period, impressionable young girls in rural Java went to the hair salon requesting the same style of haircut called the 'shaggy', which was considered trendy at that time. This piece originated as the artist's commentary on how contemporary obsession with image and conformity with fashion 'trends' results in a loss of individuality and a dehumanising same-ness. Concurrently, the work also makes a powerful statement about certain cultures' obsession with hair (and by extension, the universal vanity of women and their anxiety to preserve their beauty), transforming something conventionally 'feminine' and alluring into monstrous proportions.
2011
installation with single-channel hd video projection, multi-channel audio, lighting, smoke machines and show control system
Commissioned for the Singapore Pavilion at the 54th Venice Biennale in 2011, The Cloud of Unknowing enfolds artist Ho Tzu Nyen’s wide-ranging interests which include art, art history, historiography and philosophy. This video installation takes as its central subject, the cloud, and explores its symbolic and aesthetic representation across cultures, history and geography. Comprising elaborate and evocative tableaus that refer back to canonical artworks, The Cloud of Unknowing condenses the artist’s multiple, eclectic sources of research and reference. Shot within a block of public housing in Singapore, the narrative revolves around eight characters and their encounters with a cloud or cloudlike figure. The Cloud of Unknowing portrays the characters in a moment of revelation, and their experiences reference a medieval text of the same name—a meditative contemplation upon the divine, where the cloud paradoxically represents both the moment of uncertainty and connection with divinity.