- Richard Koh Fine Art
Transcription
- Richard Koh Fine Art
HASANUL ISYRAF IDRIS HOL (Higher Order Love) Chapter 1: The Fall HASANUL ISYRAF IDRIS HOL (Higher Order Love) Chapter 1: The Fall Artist Statement HOL adalah inskripsi pada serpihan batu marmar lama yang dijumpai di kuburan Yahudi ditengah Georgetown, yang aku kurang pasti apa maksud atau sambungan dari perkataan apa. Berbulanbulan ia berada distudio aku sebelum aku mula mencari pemaknaan HOL pada Google, jumpaannya adalah Higher Order Logic, teori matematik peringkat tinggi. Bermula dari situ aku mula membuat agakan aku sendiri, menggubah dan menggarap ayat baru dari situ dan tercetus frasa “Higher Order Love”. Maknanya mungkin cinta sepanjang hayat atau cinta tak bertepi. HOL is an inscription on a piece of ancient marble found in a Jewish burial in the middle of Georgetown, Penang; what I am uncertain is the meaning of the word or whether is it part of a longer word. For months, the stone rested in my studio before I Googled HOL and stumbled upon Higher Order Logic, a highlevel complex mathematical theory. Using that as a starting point, I begin to make my own assumptions, composing and working on new interpretations until I reached the phrase “Higher Order Love”. HOL’s meaning could either be eternal love or unconditional love. Throughout the journey of our life, we are constantly running after things and being occupied with things, and it seems that all those things are only to fill a cerebral databank, which subconsciously converts the activities into cherished memories. Dining in a restaurant, having a special partner, holidays and such events. All of those memorable things are to be cherished and told as significant moments that cement our existence on earth. Everything is recorded and stored, without prejudice. Memory, in my opinion, will eventually evolve and mutate. As it develops, I imagine it as a permanent forest reserve, which I titled HOL (Higher Order Love). We can go back and forth to HOL Piece of inscribed marble stone following our needs; there are waterfalls of tears, lakes of seeds, houses of worship, graveyards, a coliseum for wild beasts that are full of rage and anger and a cave for shelter in which we would sometimes sit and share our life experiences. HOL consists of a number of fragmented episodic memories from the wilderness of my mind in which I bring forth to share. “The Fall” is the first chapter of HOL, to remember “The Fall” can be connoted in a variety of flavors, a mix of delight and gloom. Between falling off Jewish cemetery in Georgetown, Penang Segala perkara yang kita kejar dan lakukan sepanjang hidup kadangkala seperti hanya untuk memenuhkan databank dalam minda yang bertukar sebagai memori untuk dihayati. Menikmati rasa makanan di restoran, mempunyai pasangan, melancong dan sebagainya. Segalanya untuk dikenang dan diceritakan berkalikali sebagai detik penting tanda kewujudan kita diatas bumi ini. Segalanya terakam dan tersimpan, mahu tidak mahu dia tetap ada. Memori menurut bacaanku, sebenarnya bercambah dan tumbuh, ia berevolusi dan bermutasi. Melalui masa dia membesar dan aku bayangkan ia adalah hutan simpan kekal yang aku namakan HOL (Higher Order Love). Kita boleh pergi dan balik mengikut keperluan, ada air terjun kesedihan, tasik benih, rumah ibadat untuk bermunajat, padang kubur, stadium haiwan buas yang penuh dendam atau gua tempat berlindung yang kadang - kadang kita bualkan untuk berkongsi sebagai pengalaman hidup. HOL adalah beberapa fragmen episodic memories hasil hutan minda yang aku bawak untuk dikongsi. “Jatuh” adalah bab pertama dalam HOL, mengenang “Jatuh” boleh dikonotasikan dalam pelbagai rasa, bercampur antara gembira dan sedih. Antara jatuh basikal dan jatuh cinta untuk pertama kali. a bike and falling in love for the first time. Hasanul Isyraf Idris Pulau Pinang 2016 Hasanul’s latest series of works lingers around the idea of falling. For Hasanul, falling can either be a positive or negative thing. The artist reminisce on past memories such as falling off a bike or falling in love while working on this series. These memories are not limited to personal ones but extend to moments in history that somehow imprint Hasanul’s sense of being until today. These include the death themes in Andy Warhol’s work between 1962-64, two of which are titled ‘Suicide’ - Fallen Body (1962) and Purple Jumping Man (1963). Both are the appropriation of suicide images in which one is a fallen body popularly known as ‘the most beautiful suicide’ because of the composed position and visually unbroken body The Melancholic Moment of Falling Dr. Tetriana Ahmed Fauzi and with legs crossed elegantly. This fall provides an uncanny comparison to Yves Klein’s Leap Into the Void (1960) in which the artist jumps off from a rooftop into the street. The photograph which was shot and edited later was published in broadsheet with a caption that reads ‘’the painter of space hurls himself into the void’’ as a protest to the space race. The work came out 6 months before Yuri Gagarin’s flight into space. The notion of falling and flight find further metonymic movement in Hasanul’s consciousness, into the Falling Man by Richard Drew. Unlike Klein, however, the fate of ‘Falling Man’ in Richard Drew’s journalistic photography was a tragic one. One of the many victims of September 11, ‘Falling Man’ was caught on camera in a vertical dive before he fell to the ground. Although Richard Drew caught about a dozen frames of the fall, one of the poignant images was a graceful fall that touches many. While the notion of falling mentioned above connotes the tragic ends of human lives, falling also marks the beginning of everything. For a believer, everything began with the epic fall when Satan denounces Adam and refuses to bow down to him that God cast him out from heaven forever. The fallen angel, since then has sworn to persuade human into doing and thinking of bad deeds. As someone who is concerned about spiritual wellbeing, the religiosity of falling is also at the edge of Hasanul’s thought. He refers to religious figures and deities in his drawings as metaphors or representations of a certain traits or memory. He is conscious of his decision in making the choice as he thinks it is a ‘good’ choice and he is in a phase of discovering religious symbols and knowledge. Religion and its knowledge are becoming fluid to him as he delves into them. For him, everything connected to religion is supposed to be calming and leading towards spiritual cleansing. Hasanul also feels that drawing’s meditative process has helped him to combat depression. As he struggled with personal challenges when producing Back From Planet Luvox (BFPL), his previous solo show in 2014, Hasanul continued the fight against depression with a more elaborate setting and intricate characters teaching in Sabah, Ganesh was alienated and treated differently because through drawing. His drawings have become more visually complex of his race. It was an incident that he couldn’t forget. Between the forest and packed, leaving almost no room for space, and this time leaving burning incidents in Sabah to the fantasized story of his brother’s cancer Luvox behind. The images of hybrid skeletons from BFPL are replaced by phase, the plots in the drawings unravel. Often the memories of his late humanoid figures. Slithering snakes and mutated four-legged creatures mother are the most significant ones projected in his works. In Topographic are among the images that populate the landscapes of his drawings. Albeit Retro Dingdang Amnesia (2015), a falling bridge that protrudes from the left the gory nature of the images, especially in Sorry Mak Tattoo and Spa (2015) side bears the writing MAK as part of it’s construction. The half-broken and Orient Craters on Graveyard (2015), his drawings exude a serene sense wooden bridge is also decorated with carvings from his parents’ house in of atmosphere, probably because of the decorative elements, patterns and Perak. In the drawing, pieces of everything seem to scatter in slow motions repetitive visual texture quality. In Orient Craters on Graveyard, the tonal towards all directions. The crumbling landscape of Topographic Retro detail of the lunar craters, which is actually figures blending in the moon’s Dingdang Amnesia portrays MAK’s disintegrated world. The temple on the topography, is almost as dense as the pointillistic galaxy-like landscape corner, however, is untouched by the catastrophic tragedy. background. Much like the detailed drawing of Louise Despont from her Hasanul’s notion of memory is melancholic. It is the past remembered. solo exhibition titled Energy Scaffolds and Information Architecture (2016), the It exists somewhere in mind that is sometimes recalled and often meditative quality in her drawing installations resonate with Hasanul’s mentioned. There are good ones and bad ones but those that impact deeply drawing. Her drawings are mostly symmetrical in composition with are the traumatising experiences that scar him for life. Hasanul spoke repeating patterns on gridded paper. The lines are gentler and hues much of episodic memory, referring to a person’s unique memory of a specific softer, making the drawing’s ambience subtler and more serene. According event. According to Kim Ann Zimmermann (2014), a person’s memory to Claire Voon (2006), Despont’s lines have a gentle way of pulling you of an event will be different from someone else’s recollection of the same into her constructed setting and inviting deep, personal meditation. experience. Episodic memories are events that sometimes are deeply Compared to his previous body of work, the current works were not ingrained in the mind, due to the emotional baggage it carries. People will produced entirely from sketches. The images emerge in his mind as he normally remember details of the event right down to a particular colour, draws them one by one continuously. It was during the drawing process sound or smell. that he ‘summoned’ these images from his memory. He selects, allocates “Sorry Mom Tattoo and Spa” is a real name of tattoo parlour he stumbled and composes them in the drawings. At the same time, he would drive or upon the internet while browsing. The spa in Sorry Mak Tattoo and Spa take walks to find subjects that would recall and ignite old memories. These drawing is filled with gods and deities rejuvenating themselves and getting processes help him in having a continuous flow of mental images. The nature of drawing as an activity itself helps to activate the flow of images Shisa, a guardian lian that comes to mind. Since drawing is like second nature to him, it advocates tattoos done. According to Hasanul, the godly figures in the drawing are in balance with the evil ones as they are portrayed to be symbolically bad and vice versa. For example, in Buddha’s hand is a tattoo of the word Lucy, short the generation of ideas, or recall past images. Sometimes he feels that for Lucifer. The spa is a reminiscence of Hayao Miyazaki’s bath house for certain memory needs to be immortalized in drawing. Other times, it’s the the gods in Spirited Away (2001), where spirits go to the bathhouse to cleanse drawing process that recalls a memory, in which drawing a certain image and refresh themselves. There are a lot of images in Hasanul’s works bearing reminds him of a certain memory which leads him to draw more and more. symbolic significance that represent a certain event or place; Sarasvati and Bali trips, snakes wearing necklaces and his good friend Edison, the lucky For Hasanul, there is no grand narrative of memory for each work. Each symbols that decorated the spa hall with Osaka trip, and lots more. But the memory imbued in the drawings is layered and overlaps one another. shadow of his mother is always present, resonating in several images and Certain images may recur a few times to represent certain memories. symbols in the drawings. For example, the elephant which sometimes resembles the Hindu God Each symbol represents different memories, like disparate fragments, Ganesha in Sorry Mak Tattoo and Spa, is a memory of circus elephant and they are pieced together in a drawing. A specific event experienced by a also representing his good friend Ganesh. During the time when he was Saraswati statue in Pura Ulun Bali person will not be the same when shared especially as representations. Anish Kapoor’s commissioned piece for the Guggenheim Museum is a decorative textural details and fantastic juxtaposition of images in large-scale sculpture that can never be fully understood or experienced an ambiguous perspective vision. They are echoes of his thoughts, of visually. The sculpture called Memory (2008) is designed in a way that you memories revisited and dissected. It is melancholic and emotionally can’t see the full scale of the work or understand how it was built in the intense. The emotional attachment it carries is overwhelming but space. From each angle, you can only view some parts of the works. The not heart wrenching, like when your chest is choked from within. sculpture begs questions of how it was made, brought in and assembled. Hasanul’s fragmented memories are in parts joined together in drawings similar to Anish Kapoor’s sculpture, a mystery that can never be revealed to the viewer without detailed explanation from the artist himself. Note According to Sandhini Poder (Anish Kapoor: Memory 2009), curator at Part of the exhibition also includes small drawings which are done during a Rimbun Dahan the Asian Museum, ‘in a way it is an inaccessibility the fact that the artist residency in 2015. These drawings are inspired by the ‘little forest’ that surrounds him. The is not giving you objects that you can perceived as a whole, it’s really time spent in Rimbun Dahan allowed him to contemplate on his creative practice and be fragmented, it is preventing you getting the experience of the entire piece.’ closer to nature. There he recorded gamelan music, sounds of nature at night and casting wild boars footprint with plaster of Paris. It also permits him to experiment with materials Although you can see Hasanul’s drawings in totality because of their two- and find possibilities in creating new artworks. dimensionality, a viewer can never grasp the fragmented memories that each image symbolizes, or fully comprehend the events or experiences of Bibliography the memories that support them. Nonetheless, this is not a major concern Anish Kapoor: Memory, video, Guggenheim.org, 2009, viewed 26 February 2016, <http:// for the artist, for it is not a factor that will stop a viewer from appreciating www.guggenheim.org/new-york/exhibitions/past/exhibit/3317> the works. Block, A. (2016) ‘Louise Despont Site-Specific Structures Fill NY’s Drawing Center’. Interior Design [Online] Available at: http://www.interiordesign.net/articles/11558- Anatomy of Amygdala (2015) is an invented accident scene on a highway. louise-despont-site-specific-structures-fill-ny-s-drawing-center/ (Accessed: 27 February Neon bright, packed with the busy scene of workers extinguishing fire 2016) and moving dead creatures hint at a linear narrative rather than a mixture Carter, A.L. (1923) ‘Falling as a Theme in Literature’. Modern Language Notes, Vol. 38, No. of images and representations. One also finds characters which resemble 6 (Jun., 1923), pp. 340-343 [Online] Available at : http://www.jstor.org/stable/2915183 a forensic team or scientists in a middle of an investigation. Somewhere (Accessed: 27 February 2016) in the middle of the scene, amongst the landscape is a holy tree, complete Cosgrove, B. (2014) ‘The Most Beautiful Suicide: A Violent Death, an Immortal Photo’. Time with holy men in meditation. The final piece of the large scale drawing is [Online] Available at: http://time.com/3456028/the-most-beautiful-suicide-a-violent- called Shanti Pavilion (2016), an apocalyptic scene of falling dark figures in a coliseum with a courtyard in the bottom part of the drawing. The space death-an-immortal-photo/(Accessed 25 February 2016) Elephant motive in batik is marked with graffiti and we can see a shamanic figure in green and more artnews.com/2010/03/01/yves-kleins-leap-year/ (Accessed: 27 February 2016) workers in uniforms. The figure in green seems to be the head of a clean up Pompeo, J. (2011) ‘Falling Man Retraces Steps Recalling Unknown Soldier’. Yahoo News, operation down at the courtyard. All around the coliseum are more figures, [Online] Available at http://news.yahoo.com/photographer-behind-9-11-falling-man- spirits and deities with tattoos inscribing names of good and evil in one retraces-steps-recalls-unknown-soldier.html (Accessed: 27 February 2016) place, falling, destroyed, rising and standing. Voon, C. (2016) ‘Drawing the Invisible Shapes of Energy’. Hyperallergic.com, (March, 2016) [Online] Available at : http://hyperallergic.com/277119/drawing-the-invisible-shapes-of- Down the rabbit hole is where Alice fell in what seems like a long energy/ (Accessed: 27 February 2016) fall that never ended in a dream, to find herself in Wonderland with Zimmermann, K.A. (2014) Episodic Memory: Definition and Examples. Live Science idiosyncratic and amusing characters. Much like Hasanul’s drawing, (February, 2014) [Online] Available at: http://www.livescience.com/43682-episodic- we would find ourselves musing over the many characters that fill the memory.html (Accessed: 27 February 2016) drawings. Each piece of Hasanul’s large scale drawing is unique. There is no exactly similar visual composition or formula. It is hard to categorize them as a series, but what unify them are the densely populated images, Levin, K. (2010) ‘Yves Klein’s Leap Year’. Artnews [Online] Available at: http://www. Buddha and Jesus in Japanese comic Artworks Topographic Retro Dingdang 2015 Felt, ink, watercolour, pencil and glitter on paper 153 x 153 cm Anatomy of Amygdala 2015 Sticker, ink, watercolor, graphite and pencil on paper 153 x 182 cm Orient Craters on Graveyard 2015 Ink and glitter on paper 153 x 153 cm Sorry Mak Tattoo and Spa 2015 Sticker, ink, pencil and watercolor on paper 153 x 153 cm Shanti Pavilion 2016 Ink, pencil, graphite and color pencil on paper 153 x 182 cm Sumsorry Santan and Batgod 2015 2015 Pencil, ink and watercolor on paper 21 x 29.5 cm Pencil, ink and watercolor on paper 21 x 29.5 cm Santan and the Acid Party Band 2015 Ink and watercolor on paper 21 x 29.5 cm Sadhu Kingfisher 2015 Watercolour, ink and graphite on paper 21 x 29.5 cm Facing Mantra Rainmoon 2015 2015 Ink on paper 29.5 x 21 cm Ink on paper 29.5 x 21 cm Dancing Dengue 2015 Ink on paper 29.5 x 21 cm Pool 2015 Ink on paper 29.5 x 21 cm Hawaii 5.0 Mempening 2016 2015 Scratch paper 29 x 20 cm Ink on paper 21 x 29.5 cm Prana Teardrop Bhakti Angel Perfect Mandala 2015 2015 2015 Scratch paper 29 x 20 cm Scratch paper 29 x 20 cm Scratch paper 29 x 20 cm X3 Cabinet 2015 2015 Scratch paper 20 x 29 cm Scratch paper 19 x 27.5 cm Fender Dating Finger Strumming 2015 Scratch paper 19.5 x 27.5 cm Hasanul Isyraf Idris Hasanul Isyraf Idris (b. 1978, Malaysia) was trained at Mara University of Technology, UiTM, in Perak. He has received a number of awards, including the Young Contemporary Arts Award in 2007 at the National Visual Arts Gallery, Kuala Lumpur, the Incentive Award at the Open Show held at the Shah Alam Gallery and the Consolation Prize for the Young Talent Art Exhibition at the Penang Art Gallery. A highly elusive artist, Hasanul shuns attending openings and attempts to work anonymously in the art scene. Education Hasanul Isyraf Idris produces works in a variety of media, from paintings and meticulously crafted drawings to painted oven-baked clay sculptures. Mining inspiration from within, he articulates his personal struggles as an artist by personifying them as strange characters that inhabit his invented universes. Influenced by the graphics of underground comic books, 1960s science fiction, fast food, and street art and fashion, he juggles pop-culture references with a personal viewpoint. Recurring topics in his practice are the meaning of life and death, memories and fantasies and sin and reward. 2015 Bachelor in Fine Art, Mara University of Technology UiTM, Perak, Malaysia Solo Exhibitions 2016 HOL Chapter 1: The Fall, Richard Koh Fine, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia 2014 Back from Planet Luvox, Richard Koh Fine Art, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia 2011 Clash of the Pigments, Richard Koh Fine Art, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia Group Exhibitions Malaysian Art, A New Perspective, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia 2007 Young Contemporary Art Exhibition, National Visual Arts Gallery, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia Three New Voices, Wei Ling Gallery, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia 2006 Pameran Titian Budaya Malaysia, Brunei Darussalam Open Show, National Visual Arts Gallery, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia Tribute To Jeri Azahari, National Visual Arts Gallery, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia 2005 Miniature Show, Maya Art Gallery, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia Richard Koh Fine Art, Singapore AID For Tsunami Relief, National Visual Arts Gallery, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia Malaysian Art, A New Perspective, Richard Koh Fine Art, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia Below 1000, Gema Rimba Gallery, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia Open Gate - Asian Sounds Research, with Japan Foundation, Hin Bus Depot, Georgetown, Malaysia 2004 Young Contemporary Art Exhibition, National Visual Arts Gallery, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia 2014 KIAF/14, Seoul, Korea Malaysian Eye, White Box, Publika, Malaysia Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia 1999 Open Show, Shah Alam Art Gallery, Kuala Lumpur, MEAA (Malaysian Emerging Artists Awards) Finalist Exhibition, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia Arts Kuala Lumpur - Melbourne 2014, Space @ Collins, Melbourne 2013 YOUNG MALAYSIAN ARTISTS: NEW OBJECT(ION) II (YMA II), Petronas Gallery, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia 2011 Art Expo Malaysia 2011, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia The Junction, Pelita Hati Gallery, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia Young Talent Art Exhibition, Penang Fest, Penang Art Gallery, Malaysia 1998Julung, Melaka Museum, Malaysia Senirupa, Darul Ridzuan Museum, Perak, Malaysia Residencies 2015 South East Asian Art Residency, Rimbun Dahan, 2010 Ringan-ringan, Map White Box, Publika, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia January Showcase, Chandan Gallery, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia Awards & Activities International Contemporary Art Show (Imcas), 2007 Young Contemporary Arts Award, National Visual 1999 Incentive Award, Open Show, Shah Alam Gallery, 2009 Danga Bay, Johor Bahru, Malaysia Our Hearts For Yours, Chandan Gallery, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia 18@8, Weiling Gallery, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia 2008 Semangat Chandan : Contemporary Artist From The Land Of Grace, Chandan Gallery, Kuang, Malaysia Arts Gallery, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia Shah Alam, Selangor, Malaysia Consolation Prize, Young Talent Art Exhibition, Penang Art Gallery, Penang, Malaysia Richard Koh Fine Art has been in operation since 2005 and is regarded as a pioneer for introducing Southeast Asian contemporary art to Malaysia and the region. Promoting an adventurous roster of emerging and established Southeast Asian artists, the gallery regularly mounts exhibitions locally and abroad with a commitment to emerging practices and challenging media. RICHARD KOH FINE ART 229 229 Jalan Maarof Bukit Bandaraya, Bangsar 59100 Kuala Lumpur Malaysia T +60 (03) 2095 3300 @ info @ rkfineart.com BVII Lot No. 2F-3, Level 2 Bangsar Village II Jalan Telawi 1, Bangsar Baru 59100 Kuala Lumpur Malaysia T +60 (03) 2283 3677 F +60 (03) 2283 4677 SINGAPORE OFFICE 10 Ubi Crescent #04-99 Ubi Techpark Lobby E Singapore 408564 All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronically, including photocopy, recording or any information storage and retrieval system, without the prior consent from the artist and gallery. Publication © 2016 Richard Koh Fine Art, Kuala Lumpur Artwork and Images © 2016 Hasanul Isyraf Idris Essay - Dr. Tetriana Ahmed Fauzi Translation of artist statement - Haffendi Anuar This catalog is published to accompany a solo exhibition by Hasanul Isyraf Idris titled, HOL (Higher Order Love), Chapter 1: The Fall at Richard Koh Fine Art, Kuala Lumpur from 9 to 23 April 2016.