4 April 2025

Modern Art

We didn't know about the Queensland Gallery of Modern Art but I'm glad we found it because I learnt a lot. 
The current exhibition is Asia Pacific Triennial. Before entering the building I thought I wouldn't like much of it because I wouldn't understand it, but as I was watching the first installation I suddenly realised I was looking it it from a different perspective. All those years of critically exclaiming "I don't understand it" or "What a load of rubbish" (there is still some stuff I don't understand though), and now I think "Yes I'm enjoying this" and "That's clever". And maybe that's it - it's not about understanding but enjoying.


Weaving


and Web making


Various aspects of Mumbai life captured on time lapse videos



'Kin' by Nadiah Bamadhaj consists of five beautifully graceful charcoal collage portraits of her family, in which each subject is depicted clothed in batik that includes a motif relating to their life experience and identity.
  
  
Up close the folds of material looked amazingly lifelike


These are pretty


This looks like painted planks of wood but I like it.


'Echo' by Le Thuy evokes a ruined house


The work began with the recovery of nine doors from a dismantled house in the historical town of H
i An, which the artist painted in red laquer and gold foiling, incorporating references to history, memento mori narratives and pan-Asian religions.


Alyen Leeachum Foning belongs to the Lepcha people of the Eastern Himalayas. Her installation is dedicated to her ancestors, and to the story of her people. The installation centres around the Muun, a traditional female shaman. Muuns are the medium between the spirit world, Mother Creator and humans. The headgear is created as a personal ceremonial regalia, channelling the song of the local Relli River and  honouring the cycles of life and death, and how we return to where we came from.



'Drifting Toward the Red Star' by Jagdish Moktan is an ongoing project through which he explores his family history from archives, photographs, socialist literature, communist ephemera and educational materials. His father migrated to the city as a young boy becoming a thangka painter, as did many young men, and was drawn to communism in the 1980s during a time of awareness among the oppressed. Moktan's work acknowledges his father's struggles.

Cranleigh Scool Library 2016

Charles Lim Yi Yong born 1973 Singapore. Lives and works in Singapore.
The picture is Cranleigh School Library 2016, courtesy of the artist.
In 1992, in his final year as a student at Cranleigh School in Surrey, Charles Lim stole a book from the school library. The book, titled 'Down The Wind: A Yachtsman's Anthology' is an autobiographical account by noted conservationist and sportsman Sir Peter Scott of the circumstances surrounding the invention of the trapeze. Scott claims to have introduced the device at the 1938 Prince of Wales Cup, and attributes his victory to its ingenuity. However there is widespread evidence that the dugang - a similar counterbalancing rope system developed in South East Asia - had been in use for generations before then, casting doubt on Scott's assertion that it was a British invention.
Lim still has the stolen paperback!


Eleng Luluan’s tapestry of Typhoon Koinu hitting Taiwan in 2023 is made entirely of recycled hessian sacks, fish nets, ropes and other debris.


'Blood, Flesh, Bone' by Chung Seoyoung references the basic materials that comprise human life.

Dear reader, I hope you have enjoyed the tour of the gallery.

∼ Be safe and well∼ 
Polly x 


8 comments:

  1. A beautiful exhibit. A feast for the eyes and mind!

    ReplyDelete
  2. The Typhoon Koinu tapestry is stunning! I agree that modern art is the most challenging to appreciate but you're right -- it is about enjoying it, NOT understanding it. We must interact with our hearts, not our heads. Which is true of all art and art forms, actually.

    ReplyDelete
  3. I love your outlook of it's not about understanding, it's about enjoying. Thank you for the very cool tour!

    ReplyDelete
  4. You are so right, art is to enjoy. The creator of it is the one who understands it.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Yes, you're right Michelle, it means everything to the creator

      Delete