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RogueArt visits Taipei

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We were recently in Taipei and have concluded that despite the four-and-half hour flight time, grim weather and so-so food, the trip to Taiwan was definitely worth the time (and money) in order to catch Cai Guo-Qiang’s solo ‘Hanging Out in the Museum’ at the Taipei Fine Art Museum. As photography was strictly not allowed, it is quite impossible to describe the power and epic scale of the artist’s elaborate installations and gunpowder projects presented in this retrospective exhibition. Nevertheless, Rachel managed to sneak a few shots when the guard was not looking. (Please see below for scenes from the show, and apologies to TFAM for breaking rules!) The artist’s attention to detail, precision and the power of his underlying messages are literally mind blowing! The exhibition was divided into two parts: “Dramatic Time Condensed” on the first floor explores Mr. Cai’s tendency to “counteract time, so that movement and dramatic movement –which are only possible in time– are condensed into still objects”, while the second floor, titled “Contradictory, Changeable Gunpowder”, traces the development of Mr. Cai’s gunpowder exploits from early paintings with gunpowder to the blowing up of his ‘sketches’. A comprehensive collection of video documentation also provide further understanding to Mr. Cai’s pyromaniacal ‘drawing’ process and gunpowder performances , and these range from earlier works such as the “Project for Extraterrestials” series (made during the 1990s) to the recent opening and closing ceremonies of the 2008 Beijing Olympics.

“Head On“, an installation with 99 life-sized wolves, fabricated from sheepskins and stuffed with hay and metal wires, barreling in a continuous stream towards (and into) a glass wall, is definitely a Rogue favourite. Loaned from Deutsche Bank’s collection, this work is a critique of the German reunification. We found the artist’s statement “invisible walls are the hardest to dismantle” –describing the German condition – very apt for Malaysia too. All in all, we spent between three to five hours at the museum (twice!) and found ourselves quite reluctant to leave. To quote our travel companion Mr. Lau,  “Cai Guo-Qiang has single-handedly beat 5000 years of Chinese history” as he held our attention far longer than the National Palace Museum exhibition –5 hours as compared to 1 hour– displaying treasures from the Chinese world. We heart Cai Guo-Qiang : )

Please don’t miss out on this show if you are in Taipei, the show closes on 21 February 2010 (closed on Mondays and CNY).

The Taipei Fine Art Museum

The Taipei Fine Art Museum

Cultural Melting Bath : Project for the 20th Century

Cultural Melting Bath : Project for the 20th Century

Rent Collection Courtyard

Rent Collection Courtyard

Rent Collection Courtyard

Rent Collection Courtyard

Head On

Head On

Inoppurtune : Stage One

Inopportune : Stage One

Reflection - A Gift from Iwaki

Reflection - A Gift from Iwaki

Lucky Draw Prizes

Lucky Draw Prizes

Rachel was particularly excited about the Lucky Draw at TFAM. The prizes are: (Week #1) A pair of return tickets to Hong Kong; ( Week #2) Tea with Cai Guo-Qiang and a signed exhibition catalogue; (Week #3) TWD $ 20,000 (approx RM 2,200) Voucher from Eslite Bookshop; (Week #4) 1 iphone 3GS; (Week #5) A pair of return tickets to New York to visit Cai Guo-Qiang’s Studio and tea with the artist at the Empire State Building. WOW!!!

To make the trip even more worthwhile, we also caught Takashi Murakami’s print show at Arki Gallery near the Taipei Main Station, which will run until April 2010. We were impressed by the Taiwanese audience’s enthusiasm for art! There were at least 3 rows of people in front of any artwork at any one time when we visited Van Gogh’s exhibition at The National Museum of History. We also had to return to MOCA Taipei twice before we had the opportunity to enter the museum as we could not bear the 2-hour ticket queue outside the museum on our first visit. Rachel managed to squeeze in time to catch the ‘Visual Attract and Attack’ at MOCA Taipei (after the 2nd attempt) and here are pictures of some of the works on show.

The 2-hour que outside MOCA

The 2-hour queue outside MOCA

Alice in Wonderland

The Queen of Hearts in Alice's Adventures in Wonderland by Yang Moa-lin

Alice in Wonderland

Alice's Adventures in Wonderland by Yang Moa-lin

Artwork by Japanese artist

PixCell-Elk by Japanese artist Kohei Nawa

A sculpture by Takashi Murakami

A sculpture by Takashi Murakami

Antwork by

Movement Age by Chen Zhiguang

Superheroes in foetus stage

Superheroes in fetus stage by Alexandre Nicolas

Baby Hulk

Baby Hulk

Baby Wonderwoman

Baby Wonderwoman

Malaysia Boleh! It was a lovely surprise to see Chan Kok Hooi's artworks here too!

Malaysia Boleh! It was a lovely surprise to see Chan Kok Hooi artworks here too!

(RN & AO)


December 10th, 2010 |

Tags: Arki Gallery, Cai Guo-Qiang, MOCA Taipei, Taipei Fine Art Museum, Takashi Murakami, The National Museum of History




23 Reasons We Still Need Superman

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RogueArt is proud to host 23 Reasons We Still Need Superman, a traveling video art festival devised and curated by Tim Crowley. This presentation is an extensive overview of video work from the last 15 years. In true Myspace/ Facebook fashion, the selection is both personalized and intentionally un-private, customized and compartmentalized yet available to all. It targets the interest of artists in investigating how images operate and construct our understanding of the world. They explore aesthetic concepts, everyday narratives, and sociopolitical realities and utopias. While some artists use the video to challenge our assumptions about the mimetic nature of the medium, the curatorial focus of 23 Reasons We Still Need Superman will be the relationship between performance and video, what reaction the works create in the audience and the subject matter as a catalyst for dialogue. Contemporary reality is an assemblage of whatever grabs our attention and we want these works to play part of the contemporary reality collage of the viewers, to form an alternative kind of map.

The opening of the video art festival is this Friday, 15 January 2010 from 7-10pm at 19 Jalan Berangan. The screening will also continue on Saturday, 16 January 2010.

Supported by Timeout KL and 19 Jalan Berangan.
The video art festival will continue its travel to Beijing, Mumbai, Delhi and Bangalore.


December 10th, 2010 |



we're moving

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As of 10 March 2010, RogueArt will be moving our office premises to:

I7 Taman Tunku Apartments
Bukit Tunku
50480 Kuala Lumpur

We’ve had a great stay at No. 19 Jalan Berangan, and we hope you have enjoyed the exhibitions and events we’ve organised and hosted there. Thank you for your support over the past year.

You can still call us at 016 266 7413 and email us at contact@rogueart.asia. Do also visit our website at www.rogueart.asia for our latest news.

We will be in touch soon with announcements of a number of our upcoming projects for 2010!


December 9th, 2010 |



Last chance to see….

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If in Singapore this week, we strongly recommend you try to catch the last few days of FX Harsono: Testimonies at Singapore Art Museum, which ends 9 May.  If you can’t, download the exhibition catalogue from the SAM website.

While at SAM do also go see Ming Wong, Life of Imitation, which runs to 22 August – well worth the price of the tickets!

.


December 5th, 2010 |

Tags: f x harsono, ming wong




Picture of the Week

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Tan Nan See, “I Wanna Be A Contemporary Artist”, 2006-2007, Mixed media.

This work is exhibited at Galeri Petronas, KLCC in their exhibition “Young Malaysian Artists – New Objec(tion), 13 July – 3 October 2010.


August 10th, 2010 |



RogueArt Newsletter July 2010

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The dust has now settled from our move to Taman Tunku apartments in March 2010. While we adjust to the cosier dimensions of our office space, Rogue has been working on a few projects at a steady simmer. At present, we are also juggling a couple of unexpected last minute offers which we simply could not refuse.  We thought we’d take a moment to share with you are activities for the upcoming months, in case you are wondering what has been keeping us busy. View/Download the PDF here.

To keep in touch with our activities, join us on Facebook!



July 7th, 2010 |



Malaysian Art Friends on 26th June 2010

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We are in the middle of getting ready for the exhibition “Malaysian Art Friends : Highlights from 15 Private Collections” opening at the National Art Gallery Malaysia this weekend. This exhibition will be held in conjunction with the launch of the book “30 Art Friends : Appreciating Southeast Asia Art”. So, if you are free on Saturday evening, do drop by and join us at the exhibition opening at 8pm on June 26th, 2010. The event will be officiated by Y Bhg Tan Sri Kamarul Ariffin.

National Art Gallery Malaysia
2, Jalan Temerloh, Off Jalan Tun Razak, Kuala Lumpur

The exhibition continues until 20 July 2010

RSVP before 24 June 2010
+603 4026 7000
Noor Elissa
Salma At’riah


June 22nd, 2010 |



Still Crazy After All: Q & A with Arteri Malaysia

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We had a chat with our friends at Arteri Malaysia about our involvement with Agus Suwage’s monograph “Still Crazy After All These Years”. Click here to read

For more about Agus Suwage’s work, check out his website here.

(AO)


June 4th, 2010 |

Tags: Agus Suwage, Arteri, Still Crazy After All These Years




Victory at Lunar Peaks

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We’d like to congratulate national laureate Datuk Syed Ahmad Jamal on winning his court case against the Mayor of KL last Friday, and to the courts for their enlightened decision on this landmark case for the Malaysian artist community. The Mayor of KL has been ordered to pay RM750,000 to Datuk Syed for “damages on infringement of moral rights” following the massive alteration of the artist’s Lunar Peaks sculpture (commissioned by UMBC Harta Sdn Bhd in 1985) at Jalan Bandar without his consent. Read the reports in Malaysian Digest and The Star.

We salute Datuk Syed and Datin Hamidah and their legal team for their perseverance. What now for Lunar Peaks however?

(BY)


May 26th, 2010 |

Tags: Syed Ahmad Jamal




RogueArt Recommends: Reading List

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It is talks season and we are busy preparing powerpoint presentations, reading lists, website links and so on. Beverly will be presenting a 3-part talk series “An Introduction to Contemporary Art in Malaysia” at Galeri Petronas starting this evening while I am preparing “Current Developments in Contemporary Southeast Asian Art” for Asia Art Forum in Hong Kong this coming May.

The organisers have requested that I put together a ‘further reading list’ for those interested in Southeast Asian art. Unfortunately, publishing is not our region’s forte but there are a few valuable gems and references. Here they are in chronological order:

Indonesian Contemporary Art Now
By Marc Bollansee and Enin Supriyanto
SNP Editions, 2007
ISBN-13: 9789812481429

Between Generations: 50 Years Across Modern Art in Malaysia
Beverly Yong and Hasnul J Saidon (editors)
Universiti Malaya Press, Universiti Sains Malaya Press & Valentine Willie Fine Art, 2007
ISBN: 983861348

Contemporary Art in Singapore
With Essays by Russell Storer, Gunalan Nadarajan and Eugene Tan
Institute of Contemporary Arts (ICA) Singapore, 2007
ISBN-13: 9789810564612
(Note: ICA Singapore is a part of LaSalle-SIA College of the Arts)

Telah Terbit (Out Now): Southeast Asian Contemporary Art Practices during the 1970s
Ahmad Mashadi
Singapore Art Museum, 2006
(Note: This is an exhibition guide and does not qualify as a book but the introduction essay for this show is insightful and really worth the read)

Art and Social Change: Contemporary Art in Asia and the Pacific
Caroline Turner (editor)
Pandanus Press, 2005
ISBN-10: 1740760468

Protest: Revolutionary Art in the Philippines, 1970-1990
By Alice Guillermo
University of Philippines Press, 2005
ISBN-10: 9715421679

Exploring Modern Indonesian Art: The Collection of Dr. Oei Hong Djien
By Helena Spanjaard & Oei Hong Djien
SNP Editions, 2004
ISBN-13:  9789812480101

Flavours: Thai Contemporary Art
By Steven Pettifor
Thavibu Gallery, 2003
ISBN-10:  9749173767

Image to Meaning: essays on Philippine Art
By Alice Guillermo
Ateneo de Manila University Press, 2001
ISBN: 9715503764

Contemporary Art in Asia: Traditions, Tensions
Essays by by Apinan Poshyananda, Thomas McEveilley, Geeta Kapur, Jim Supangkat, Marian Pastor Roces, Jae-Ryung Roe
Asia Society, 1997
ISBN-10: 0878480838

Modern Asian Art
By John Clark
University of Hawaii Press, 1998
ISBN-10: 9057040417

Southeast Asian Art Today
Joyce Fenema (editor)
Roeder Publications, 1996
ISBN-10: 9810060025

Vision and Idea – Relooking Modern Malaysian Art
T.K Sabapathy (editor)
National Art Gallery (Malaysia), 1994
ISBN-10: 9839572016
(Note: This book is unfortunately out of print but you can find it in some libraries in Malaysia and Singapore)

Modern Art in Thailand: Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries
By Apinan Poshyananda
Oxford University Press, 1992
ISBN-13: 9780195885620

UPDATED NOTE: It seems I have overlooked another key publication. Please also check out

Indonesian Women Artists: The Curtain Opens
by Carla Bianpoen, Farah Wardani Et Al
Yayasan Seni Rupa Indonesia, 2007
ISBN-13:  9789791656207

I apologise as these titles may not be readily available at your local bookshops but for those of you interested (and living in Kuala Lumpur), do visit the resource room at Valentine Willie Fine Art if you feel like browsing. For those keen to purchase these books, I believe Select Bookstore in Singapore stocks a number of titles, or feel free to email us contact@rogueart.asia and we’d be happy to point you in the right direction.

Also, I’d like to bring to your attention “Figuring The Times: Philippine Paintings 1996 – 2009, A Selection from the Paulino Que Collection”. This catalogue documents a small selection of works from Mr. Paulino Que’s vast collection. It was launched in conjunction with an exhibition sharing the same title on March 13th at Finale Art File, a highly anticipated show among the locals as Mr. Que is one of Manila’s most renowned and well-respected collectors. Exhibition ends April 3rd. For those of you in Manila, this show is not to be missed. Seriously. This is truly a rare opportunity to view some stunning Pinoy paintings from Mr. Que’s collection as this serious collector is somewhat ‘shy’ and does not make a habit of receiving guests regularly at home. (AO)


December 31st, 2009 |

Tags: Ahmad Mashadi, Alice Guillermo, Apinan Poshyananda, Asia Art Forum, Caroline Turner, Dr. Oei Hong Djien, Enin Supriyanto, Finale Art File, Galeri Petronas, Jim Supangkat, John Clark, Joyce Fenema, Paulino Que




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