Exhibition UnAuthorised Medium is on show at Framer Framed until Sunday 18 November 2018. Drop by during the closing weekend, 16 – 18 Nov, for a full programme marking the end of the exhibition! With performances by Lynn Lu and Quek Jia Qi, a performative lecure by Sim Chi Yin, presentations by Ho Rui An and Kazuma Obara, and a collective conversation between the participants and the show’s curator, Annie Jael Kwan.
The group exhibition UnAuthorised Medium brings together works by artists who have deep connections to Southeast Asia while also working extensively across the globe. Borrowing its title from a Vietnamese ritual of invoking the dead and the lost, the featured artists in turn evoke the ‘ghosts’ – ‘glitches’ –in the archive, activating local histories, communities and knowledge that have been erased in official, dominant narratives. The closing weekend programme, Intense Visitations, welcomes the public with presentations and experimental performances from participating artists, that will consider how certain ‘hauntings’ – entities, presences, or interventions – may infiltrate, re-emerge and persist in circulation, to effect transformative experiences in the exhibition space and its surroundings. Schedule overview: Friday 16 November: 14:00 – 18:00 – Performance Feeding the Hungry Ghosts – Lynn Lu 14:00 – 18:00 – Performance Ghost to Ourselves – Quek Jia Qi Saturday 17 November: 11:00 – 15:30 – Performance Feeding the Hungry Ghosts – Lynn Lu 11:00 – 15:30 – Performance Ghost to Ourselves – Quek Jia Qi 15:30 – 16:00 – Performative Reading One Day We’ll Understand – Sim Chi Yin 16:00 – 16:25 – Presentation Invisible Histories – Kazuma Obara 16:50 – 17:20 – Presentation Tripping, Troping – Ho Rui An 17:20 – Round table with all participants and curator Annie Jael Kwan Sunday 18 November: 12:00 – 15:00 – Performance Ghost to Ourselves – Quek Jia Qi Programme:Performance: Feeding the Hungry Ghosts – Lynn Lu Friday 16 November, 14:00 – 18:00 Saturday 17 November, 11:00 – 15:30 The Imperial Japanese Army’s occupation of Southeast Asia between 1941-1945 was marked by extraordinary brutality and barbarism. Lynn Lu’s grandparents, who experienced heinous savagery at the hands of the IJA, have since passed; however their oral histories live on in the collective memory of their descendants. Investigating this period, Lynn Lu came upon tender and tragic letters from kamikaze pilots to their mothers, and harrowing testimonies of Japanese soldiers who continued hiding alone deep in jungles for up to 30 years – subsisting on worms and mice – not knowing that the war had ended. Bringing together these haunting histories, layered with Taoist rituals of remembering our ancestors alongside occupation-enforced practices, Feeding the Hungry Ghosts will be a durational performance for one person at a time, with audio on headphones and a commemoration of war casualties with joss paper and fire. Lynn Lu – Be only afraid of standing still (2017). MAP: Waterways, Venice. Image by Seet Yun Teng. Performance Ghost to Ourselves – Quek Jia Qi Friday 16 November, 12:00 – 15:00 / Saturday 17 November, 11:00 – 15:30 / Sunday 18 November, 12:00 – 15:00 ‘Every morning we are born again.’ Exploring notions of rebirth, consciousness and reincarnation, Quek Jia Qi will host a performative ritual by way of haunting the self. In utilising the body as a living archive and the lived experience as embedded knowledge, she seeks to investigate the conditions in which our body carry traces of our past selves that our present selves may not yet recognise, from which we better understand our own subjectivity. This will be a collective exercise of being (un)comfortable in our own skin, of witnessing ourselves as embedded within living histories, and of learning to act responsibly for our imagined futures. This is a durational, one-on-one performance. Visitors can come by during the indicated timeslots to watch or join in the performance. Performative Reading: One Day We’ll Understand – Sim Chi Yin Saturday 17 November, 15:30 – 16:00 UnAuthorised Medium artist Sim Chi Yin will present her work in the form of a reading and screening, taking a sweep through her family history and hidden stories of the Communist insurgency in British Malaya which led to a 12-year war dubbed the ‘Malayan Emergency’. Over the past 7 years she has been excavating the stories of her grandfather and his generation of anti-colonial activists and guerrilla fighters, filling out narratives missing in the official archives but opening up more questions about this chapter of the early Cold War in Asia. Chi Yin will also discuss the process and trials of working on a longform project like that stemming from family history. Sim Chi Yin – One Day We’ll Understand (2018). Installation in exhibitionUnAuthorised Medium at Framer Framed, photo (c) Eva Broekema. Presentation: Invisible Histories – Kazuma Obara Saturday 17 November 2018, 16:00 – 16:25 In this presentation, Japanese photographer Kazuma Obara addresses the invisible histories and victims of Japanese aggression in South East Asia during World War 2. With a few exceptions, such as the Nanking Massacre in China and the abuse of so-called ‘comfort women’ in Korea, there has been little public recognition for the violent acts by the Japanese in South East Asia. Triumphalism and victimhood shape nationalist narratives of history, obscuring histories and realities of victims of war in other places. Obara will go into the artistic project he started in 2015, to visualise the invisible victims of Japan’s invasion in SE Asia. The project focuses specifically on one of the tragedies; the Thai-Burma railway construction and the hundreds of thousands victims subjected to forced labour. As a result of this, about 90,000 civilian labourers and more than 12,000 Allied prisoners died. Obara visited related countries such as Thailand, Malaysia, Singapore, Korea, the UK, Australia and The Netherlands and met with the victims’ families to understand the long-lasting effects of Japanese invasion. Kazuma Obara is currently further developing this project in Amsterdam, at the artist in residence Docking Station. Photo by Kazuma Obara Presentation: Tripping, Troping – Ho Rui An Saturday 17 November, 16:50 – 17:20 In this lecture, UnAuthorised Medium artist Ho Rui An shares his artistic process working between archival and field research in approaching the comparative histories and contemporaneities of Southeast/East Asia. Thinking between the positionalities of tripping – to take a trip, but also to stumble – and troping – to turn something into a trope, but also to turn – the artist reflects on the contingencies that shape our embodied encounters with a world mediated by image. Ho Rui An, foto (c) Eike Walkenhorst. On Saturday 17 November around 17:20, there will be a round table conversations with all participants in the public programme and curator Annie Jael Kwan. 16 Sep – 18 Nov 2018 Exhibition: UnAuthorised Medium A group show curated by Annie Jael Kwan Agenda 16 Sep 2018 Symposium: UnAuthorised Medium – Return and Repatriation Symposium as part of the opening weekend for exhibition UnAuthorised Medium FramerFramed Original Source
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SINGAPORE - The best way to inculcate good habits, such as carrying out simple acts of kindness, may be to start from young, and a picture book for pre-schoolers aims to do just that.
The 64-page picture book, titled The Little Things, was launched by advisers to Tampines grassroots organisations Desmond Choo and Cheng Li Hui on Saturday (Sept 30) afternoon. The book contains illustrations of kind acts, such as sharing an umbrella with someone or holding the lift for a neighbour, using local food items like kaya toast, ice kachang and roti prata as the main characters. It will be shared with pre-schools in Tampines and made available at the Tampines Regional Library. The book is part of a wider movement in Tampines, known as the Tampines Kindness Movement, which aims to foster a greater sense of community spirit, where people care for their neighbours and their environment. At the book launch at Tampines Regional Library, Mr Choo, who is also adviser of the movement, said hopefully, children will be inspired to carry out little acts of kindness and even encourage their parents to do so. "We truly believe that the simplest of acts will create a long and sustainable movement," he added. "Nothing beats having the youngest of our generation take the lead and spearhead this movement." Calvin Yang The Straits Times Original Source Can art change the world? Under this question, the organizers of the Social Art Award called for artists world-widely to submit their socially critical works. Artists from 131 countries responded with extraordinary works and projects.
On September 5, 2017, the three winners Lino Tonelotto from France, Quek Jia Qi from Singapore and Diogo da Cruz from Portugal were honored, and exhibited at WHITECONCEPTS Gallery in Berlin. They demonstrated with their politically engaged works that art can make current events visible and tangible. This is an important understanding for bringing forward the debate and thus a social change. The Social Art Award was initiated by the Institute for Art and Innovation. Its aim is to highlight the importance of social artists and their work to society. The Social Art Award 2017 Institute of Art and Innovation. e.V. Original Source |
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