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  • Exclusive interview with Boo Sze Yang, Dancing with Wolves

    Exclusive interview with Boo Sze Yang, Dancing with Wolves

    2021, Boo Sze Yang at the studio - Dancing with Wolves
    2021, Boo Sze Yang at the studio – Dancing with Wolves

    In Plato’s ideal society, there are three classes: the ruler, the law enforcer, and the people. We give power to our politicians who govern us with an iron fist or a velvet glove, hoping they will do what’s right and with fairness. We trust the law enforcers to protect and keep us safe and wish our fellow citizens are cooperative and play by the rules. However, when these balance forces are not equal, it becomes questionable and causes confusion and disruptions.

    Singapore artist Mr Boo Sze Yang’s Dancing with Wolves exhibition featured recent political unrests such as the Yellow Umbrella that questioned the governance of Hong Kong and the oppositions and resistances who keep the balance of power in check. However, the award-winning artist, who declared himself a pessimist, was ever so humble and cheerful. He gave Artitute a tongue-in-cheek interview and insights into the ideas and creations of Dancing with Wolves.

    Dancing with Wolves was recently shown at AC43 Gallery. It is now available online at their website – https://www.ac43gallery.com/boo-sze-yang-dancing-with-the-wolves.

    2021, Boo Sze Yang's Dancing with Wolves paintings in his studio
    2021, Boo Sze Yang’s Dancing with Wolves paintings in his studio

     

    Artitute: Congratulations on your latest exhibition, Dancing with Wolves. Can you tell us how did you conceptualise this exhibition?

    Boo Sze Yang: In 2013, I started to paint a painting series on our late Prime Minister, Lee Kwan Yew. I was also trying to move on from my other series of paintings, so I attempted to make some portraiture.

    So from then on, I was constantly thinking about this notion of an ideal society and started painting Lee Kwan Yew and put him on a throne. It was Plato’s idea about an ideal society, where you talk about a perfect society with three classes of people. The ruler, the law enforcer, and the people.

    So this is an accumulation of those ideas since then.

     

    Artitute: This exhibition shows a series of works depicting the political unrest known as the Umbrella Movement in Hong Kong. Can you tell us more about these works and what inspired you to create them?

    BZY: I was thinking about this idea of an ideal society that talks about citizens being an accessory to play their part.

    In a way, if you think about Platos’ ideas. Every group of people has to do and play their part to be in a harmonious kind of relationship. Hence since 2014, I’ve been thinking about how to put this whole series of paintings together. Consisting of rulers, enforcers and ordinary people. So I started making works and paintings about our ministers and artists like Ai Wei Wei.

    The protest in Hong Kong actually had a powerful impact on me because the situation happened very close to us as we are also very close to Hong Kong, so I think that gives me a strong effect. And then with Donald Trump, who had four years in the United States, that made me think about this whole notion of democracy and things that had happened in our society.

    2021 - Dancing with Wolves by Boo Sze Yang.
    2021 – Dancing with Wolves by Boo Sze Yang. Too Young to Die, 2021, oil on linen, 120x150cm.

     

    Artitute: We see several politicians in your current exhibition. In your previous works, you have commemorated the late Mr Lee Kuan Yew. However, we see some opposition parties in this series, such as Sylvia Lim and Pritam Singh from the Workers’ Party of Singapore and Mr Chiam See Tong from the Singapore Democratic Party. And, another different kind of political figure, Mr Ai Wei Wei. Can you tell us why did you draw their portraits?

    BZY: For me, a society needs different voices. So apart from people who are in power, we also need, what I call, the resistances. We constantly need people (like them) to sit on the opposite end and remind the people on the other side. So I decided that we should show people who are in power, but I am also very interested in painting people on the other scale.

    The people who are the resistance.

    2021 - Dancing with Wolves by Boo Sze Yang.
    2021 – Dancing with Wolves by Boo Sze Yang.
    (From left) Ai Wei Wei Hear No Evil, 2015, oil on linen, 120 x 150 cm., Ai Wei Wei See No Evil, 2014, oil on linen, 120 x 150 cm and Ai Wei Wei Speak No Evil, 2015, oil on linen, 120 x 150 cm.

     

    2021 - Dancing with Wolves by Boo Sze Yang.
    2021 – Dancing with Wolves by Boo Sze Yang.
    (From left) The Lion of Potong Pasir, 2021, oil on linen, 122 x 152 cm, To Slap the Driver, 2021, oil on linen, 122 x 152 cm and Leader of the Loyal Opposition, 2021, oil on linen, 122 x 152 cm.

     

    Artitute: You are well known for your still life, landscapes and architecture subjects in your previous paintings. However, there are all figures and portraits with lots of forms and movements in this exhibition. Can you tell us why did you change your subject matter for this exhibition?

    BZY: In my earlier works, my Watchdog series, there are figures and images of dogs in my paintings. There were also images of civilians, which I talked about social issues. I don’t believe in just working in just a particular mode. Instead, I believe that an artist should move across different series of genres or across various topics. My works reflect on how I felt and how I did at the point in time.

    So like I said, I’ve been thinking about making portraits since two zero one three, and then some things happened in the last few years, which gives me a lot of bullets to do my works. which is relevant to the time As Society changes, people also need to change, which I think change is necessary, and it brought about a good chance.

     

    Artitute: We heard that you were previously unwell and had recovered from Cancer. Can you share with us how your illness had impacted you and the creation of your artworks?

    BZY: In the last three years, I went through quite a lot in terms of health as in 2017 I was diagnosed with colon cancer. I went through chemotherapy, had surgery and recovered. And at the end of 2017, I was given a clean bill of health and only did six months of chemotherapy. And now it’s just an annual checkup.

    I thought I had gone through one major surgery; however, in 2019, I had a heart bypass. Fortunately, during one of my checkups, the doctor found that a few arteries were blocked. Hence, I went through another major surgery and had a heart bypass to clear 4 arteries.

    But I survived.

    I always tell people I’m a very pessimistic person, and when my wife and I got married, we decided not to have children as I feel that the world is not getting better. But actually, deep down, I think I’m very optimistic because I will always take it head-on with a positive attitude when I encounter any problem. And I survived with this cancer and my heart bypass, so it’s a good thing. However, the health scares didn’t’ really my way of making my artwork. Instead, it makes me more aware of my health, so these days, I exercise at least three or four times a week by jogging and cycling.

    2021 - Dancing with Wolves by Boo Sze Yang.
    2021 – Dancing with Wolves by Boo Sze Yang. Another One Bites the Dust, 2021, oil on linen, 120x150cm.

     

    Artitute: On this last note, what would you like your viewers to take away from this exhibition, “Dancing with Wolves”?

    BZY: This is a difficult question because different people have different viewpoints and perspectives. However, when I do my works, I like my works to tickle (humour) people a little bit and giving some clues of what I want to say; although, some of the results are pretty obvious. I would like them to think about it when they encounter it, especially in the situation that we are in. Even with abstract paintings. To view things with some imagination. Rather than giving you an answer, as an artist, we often question.

    Unfortunately, we cannot provide all the answers. That’s why artists are often misunderstood, and people perceive us to be fake.

     

    Artitute: So, you would like your viewers to come in with an open mind and question the works they see in this exhibition?

    BZY: Yes, I would like them to question or think about the (human) situation. Especially in the situation in Hong Kong, as nobody knows who is right or who is wrong. So it’s tough to tell you. And over in Singapore, some things appear to be correct, but at the same time, you are not too sure.

    Hence, there’s no one fixed answer.

    It’s always ambiguous and grey, and that’s why my paintings are always grey in the past. But humans are very colourful, so I need to use more colours to express that emotions or situations.

     

  • Rockbund Art Museum Launches Digital Platform RAM+, Unveiling Cai Guo-Qiang’s First NFT Transient Eternity

    Rockbund Art Museum Launches Digital Platform RAM+, Unveiling Cai Guo-Qiang’s First NFT Transient Eternity

    On Wednesday, June 30, 2021, Rockbund Art Museum (RAM), Shanghai, launch its brand-new digital platform RAM+. Ten years since their first collaboration, RAM is honoured to invite the internationally acclaimed artist Cai Guo-Qiang, who curated RAM’s inaugural exhibition in 2010, to mark this new milestone of its development. On the occasion of RAM’s 10th anniversary, Cai has created his first Non-Fungible Token (NFT) project, Transient Eternity—101 Ignitions of Gunpowder Paintings. The artworks will be on view from July 14–August 14, 2021, at TR Lab (trlab.com), a platform partnering with RAM to discover NFT art from the world’s leading artists. 

    Over the past ten years, Rockbund Art Museum has promoted contemporary art practices focusing on Asia, committed to going beyond the fixed definition of an exhibition, and expanding the dialogue with artists by gathering critical thinkers and practitioners from other social media cultural fields. RAM+ is an extension from the museum’s physical space into the digital world  bringing unique expertise in art and a commitment to sustainable values by supporting selected artists to engage with the possibilities of digital art and activating a curatorial approach to emerging digital ecology. Accelerated within the pandemic context, the association of digital art with NFT art offers new parameters in the digital art field. Beyond the art market and cryptocurrency community, how can an institution support the artistic creation of digital and NFT artists? RAM+ will initiate projects such as symposiums, commissions, virtual exhibitions and performative events, online publications, research and collective learning programs to embrace this new landscape and foresee the transformative changes in contemporary art.

    While Cai Guo-Qiang is most renowned for his explosion events using the sky as a canvas. Including the Footprints of History fireworks for the Beijing Olympics opening ceremony (2008), the conceptual fireworks One Night Stand over the Seine River in Paris (2013), and Sky Ladder (2015) realized in a small fishing village in his hometown. However, the artist extensive usage of gunpowder as an artistic medium began when he started exploring it on such supports as a canvas in 1984, thus establishing his unique gunpowder paintings.

    蔡国强与其火药画爆破瞬间,万国大厅,马德里,2017年。由西班牙普拉多美术馆提供
    Cai Guo-Qiang watches the ignition of a gunpowder painting at the Salón de Reinos (Hall of Realms), Madrid, 2017 © Museo Nacional del Prado

    Over the decades, Cai has exhibited at major museums across the world and in different cultures. He has created and presented a large number of gunpowder paintings. Each painting endures a meticulous preparation process, but the denotation happens in a blink. Yet, it is uniquely precious as the artwork’s moment of birth and mind-blowing in its intrinsic artistic charm. Regrettably, the impact of these moments has gone underappreciated, as focus often remains on the results of the detonation—paintings, sketches, computer renderings, photographs and video documentation—overshadowing the value, let alone the possession, of the moment itself.

    Specially commissioned by Rockbund Art Museum on this unique occasion, Cai Guo-Qiang’s Transient Eternity transforms the “ignition moments,” a crucial part of the gunpowder paintings, to NFT. One hundred ignition moments form a single NFT, while the 101st will be minted as an additional NFT— a small surprise for the NFT community. These moments all come from the pieces Cai created during his recent Individual’s Journey Through Western Art History. This Journey includes exhibitions at the Pushkin State Museum of Fine Arts in Russia, the Prado Museum in Spain, the Uffizi Galleries in Italy, the National Archaeological Museum of Naples and the Pompeii ruins in Italy, and the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum in the U.S. Each project engaged with the chapters of Western art history embodied within those institutions and, more importantly, reflected on the dilemmas and possibilities of contemporary art.

    蔡国强火药画《绘画的精神》爆破瞬间,万国大厅,马德里,2017年。由西班牙普拉多美术馆提供
    Ignition of Cai Guo-Qiang’s gunpowder painting The Spirit of Painting at the Salón de Reinos (Hall of Realms), Madrid, 2017 © Museo Nacional del Prado

    Cai comments, Transient Eternity is the existence of the explosion moment itself — neither the videos nor photographs with which the ignition instant will preserve in the traditional sense or the physical gunpowder painting that was born from the ignition…Time and space at the instant of explosion become chaotic. Like the ‘Primeval Fireball’ that channels the birth of a new star in the universe, it is accompanied by piety, anxiety, and a sense of destiny anticipating the unknown. Each work’s detonation moment is unique, encapsulating the environment and climate of that time and place. It contains shared divination of fate and the brief dislocation experienced by myself and the audience. The project contemplates: Is it possible to create an art project with a more forward-looking vision, and with more compelling forms and concepts, by leveraging the core values unique to NFT technology?”

    Larys Frogier, the director of Rockbund Art Museum, states, “In 2010, Cai Guo-Qiang transformed ‘low-tech’ inventions, handmade by peasants, into the art project Peasant Da Vincis. Before travelling to various institutions worldwide, it debuted at Rockbund Art Museum, including CCBB in Rio de Janeiro. It became the most visited exhibition by a living artist in the world in 2013. Over a decade later, the artist integrates the ‘high-tech’ nature of NFT with the moments of the birth of his gunpowder paintings to create another art project. The project poses the questions: What defines an artist’s work? What is an art project? It reflects on the questions surrounding the transience and eternity of the digital age symbolized by NFT and the core concept of how value is stored. In the isolation age of pandemic and post-pandemic, the project aims to reflect on the weight of transient existence in the eternal river of time.”

    蔡国强玻璃镜子火药画《Non-Brand 非品牌 5》爆破瞬间。罗桑摄,由蔡工作室提供
    Ignition of Cai Guo-Qiang’s gunpowder painting on glass and mirror, Non-Brand 非品牌 5. Photo by Sang Luo, courtesy Cai Studio

    Beginning July 14, Transient Eternity will be featured in a 48-hour charity auction on the TR Lab platform. Half of the auction proceeds will go to the Rockbund Art Museum to support the museum’s development and digital art research programs. The other half will go toward Cai Foundation, mainly supporting the Asian Cultural Council (ACC) Cai Fellowship Program, which funds young Chinese artists studying in the United States.

     

    Viewing the Artworks Online

    The artworks will be on view from July 14–August 14, 2021, at TR Lab (trlab.com), a platform partnering with RAM to discover NFT art from the world’s leading artists.

    Beginning July 14, Transient Eternity will be featured in a 48-hour charity auction on the TR Lab platform. Half of the auction proceeds will go to the Rockbund Art Museum to support the museum’s development and digital art research programs. The other half will go toward Cai Foundation, mainly supporting the Asian Cultural Council (ACC) Cai Fellowship Program, which funds young Chinese artists studying in the United States.

    Cai Guo Qiang – Transient Eternity – NFT

    Transient Eternity—101 Ignitions of Gunpowder Paintings
    Jul 14, 2021 – Aug 14, 2021

    For more information, please visit www.rockbundartmuseum.org and https://trlab.com/.

  • OPEN CALL: DECK – Undescribed #7 (2022)

    OPEN CALL: DECK – Undescribed #7 (2022)

    More than just a group exhibition, Undescribed is a mentorship programme for fresh graduates embarking on the journey as an artist. The 7th edition 2022 is now open for application.

    OPEN CALL: DECK – Undescribed #7 (2022)

    The programme will start in October 2021 and culminated in a group exhibition in Feb 2022. 6 applications will be shortlisted. This programme is only applicable for fresh graduates of 2021 from Singapore arts academy or university.

    Send your application to [email protected]
    Indicate subject title: “Application for Undescribed #7”
    by 15th August 2021.

    Interested applicants, please send in your portfolio of works in PDF, CV, and a short paragraph (max 800words) on your interest or propose work for the group exhibition.

    Accepted applicants will be notified by the end of September 2021 via email.

    Click here for more information.