Sculptors carving out their place on the arts map
Sculptors carving out their place on the arts map
Carla Bianpoen
Contributor
Jakarta
Amid the vibrancy of an art market dominated by works of
painters, sculptors find themselves marginalized. Even large
exhibitions and biennales only include a few sculptors, not to
speak of their scant appearances at auctions and award
competitions.
In an effort to break through such domination, sculptors
throughout Indonesia joined forces to establish the Association
of Indonesian Sculptors (API) in 2000. Not all sculptors have
become members, as some prefer to go it alone.
That has not stopped the association from proceeding with its
goals. Fueled by a strong desire -- fittingly, the acronym means
"fire" in Indonesian -- API held its first exhibition in Jakarta
200, but it did not live up to expectations as there were too
many sculptures for the limited space of the National Gallery.
This year, however, API seems to be rising to its goals. The
spacious place for their current exhibition is right in the
center of business: The World Trade Center. Filling the inner
spaces and the outer grounds of the building, the works of 84
sculptors testify to their very existence.
In Search of Peace is the theme around which the participating
works have been arranged. Yet, since no selection was applied to
submitted works, many may not directly relate to the theme.
Then again, "peace" can be many things in personal
interpretations. It is therefore not a surprise to find a
plethora of meanings, as well as modes between extremes of
utterly refined blending various techniques, like Pintor
Sirait's, and the straightforward, simple and easily
understandable forms like Hedi Hariyanto's.
As widely diverging as Pintor and Hedi's works may be, they
seem to share a common interest in pushing the boundaries that
define the art of sculpture.
Pintor Sirait's work Last Breath is a hanging sculpture, and
of a technique that combines a very thin layer of etching on
stainless steel. So thin is the etching -- as thin as human
energy when drowning in the ocean, says Pintor -- that the tidal
waves rushing against the seashore are only vaguely visible, a
helicopter flying over as if on a search and rescue mission,
looking for lost victims.
The work suggests a state of helplessness in the endless human
struggle for peace and the need to find a breath of fresh air.
Pintor said the work was inspired by the security forces
patrolling Bali's beaches prior to U.S. President George W. Bush'
recent visit, the struggle against terrorists -- ultimately the
search for peace.
The second work is a model for a work in the upcoming Busan
Biennale in Korea. It suggests a bank in a public space, which is
connected to a 3-dimensional configuration of metal forms,
reconstructed from remnants of shapes and forms found in various
traditional Indonesian batik. The work which will stay permanent
in Busan will be made of stainless steel sheets in a long process
of cutting, welding and grinding.
In contrast to Pintor's subtle, refined and lengthy processed
works stand Hedi Hariyanto's installation made of three 200 x 50
x 20 cm clay "boxes" which are seemingly roughly shaped from raw
clay . They are akin to improvised coffins in which the shape of
a corpse is dug out, and filled with all kinds of small beans
growing into sprouts after a week or so.
A twist on the traditional RIP written on Christian
tombstones, Hedi Hariyanto's installation is titled Peace in
Rest.
Other works of interest Iriantine Karnaya's Tears of War III,
resembling an homage to the fallen victims of war. Made of mixed
media, the fence-like work with red and purple cloth winded
around the capriciously shaped metal has a lyrical esthetic, with
tears made of transparent catalyst resin that touch on the
dramatic.
Also on show are Syahrizal Koto's Kehidupan (Life), a
sculpture showing a cyclist on a bicycle with a large front wheel
and a smaller back wheel, with two tiny doves on its carrier;
Yuli Prayitno's fine esthetics in Dan Aku... (And Me), a circular
glass plate on which two little fish made of silicon are
metaphors for human beings in a world of emptiness.
Nita Nursita, one of the five female sculptors in this
exhibition, focuses on women in their search of peace. Aren't
women the most vulnerable in the rampant cases of violence today,
she says. Her work in bronze, Kebaya (Traditional Blouse), is
inspired by a woman she saw during a cleansing ceremony in Bali.
Altje Ully, on the other hand, presents a nude mannequin doll
in Imaginary Peace, made of bits and pieces of wood to express
her empathy with women in the world of fashion who are required
to live a life of pretense. Stripped of her fashionable garments,
however, the mannequin is just like other women, yearning for her
solitary peace.
Perhaps the works closest to the exhibit's theme are those
made by API chairman Gregorius Sidharta Soegijo, a senior
sculptor who has developed from the modernist sculptural
formalism of his earlier years to indigenous esthetic values and
traditions.
Lingkaran Pesan dari Relung Tafakur Penghormatan kepada Cinta
dan Kedamaian (A Circular Message From Deep Contemplation in
Respect of Love and Peacefulness), is made to be in bronze, but
is currently in resin, a circle in which a figure in the lotus
position sitting on a turtle appears to be meditating.
Arsono's Waiting for the Splendor Night may share the idea of
spiritual peace, but is more specific with a focus on Islamic
teachings on ethics and morality, suggesting that a marvelous
grace will come down to fasting Muslims.
The wait for that splendor comes, not in weakness or leisure,
but in dynamic energy. Hence the red color of the two circular
welded iron plates that together represent the cosmos. Breaking
the unembellished plates are Arabic texts revealing the message
carved into the iron plates.
According to Arsono, the president director of the WTC
building, Ismail Sofyan, has agreed to assign space for API to
hold their exhibitions, including displays in between larger
events. We may therefore expect API to be more diligent and
present even better pieces in their next exhibition at this site
well suited to spreading the word about sculpture.
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In Search of Peace
Indonesian Contemporary Sculptors
API exhibition
World Trade Center
Jl. Jend. Sudirman 29-31, Jakarta
Until Nov. 20, 2003
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