The Phnom Penh Post

Exhibit takes on city’s identity

- Alessandro Marazzi Sassoon

FOR one group of artists, the rapidly changing face of Phnom Penh raises the question: what is this city’s identity? Their multidisci­plinary exhibition Identicity, curated by Portuguese photograph­er Miguel Jerónimo, seeks to adress that question.

“The whole idea of the exhibition is talking about how the urban landscape of the city shapes the identity of the people that live there,” Jerónimo said.

To that end, he has compiled illustrati­ons by artist Lolli Park; a portrait project by Syahrulfik­ri Salleh; audio recordings by Bernadette Vincent; photos and a video installati­on from the White Building Collective’s “Humans of Phnom Penh” project; sculpture by Eng Rithchanda­neth; papercut works by Lauren Iida; and paintings by Rena Chheang. The open- ing on Sunday at Meta House will also feature a screening of the short film Cambodia 2099 by director Davy Chou.

“Having half Cambodian, half expat artists is a way to have a more diverse dialogue,” says Jerónimo, who in addition to curating is also exhibiting some of his photograph­s, which layer images to highlight the contrast between Phnom Penh’s glitzy and rapid urban developmen­t and the city’s poorer inhabitant­s making a living on the street.

“People from the rural areas come to live in the city. What is their experience with the urban habitat, and changing life?” he says, explaining the themes of the exhibition.

Much of the work focuses on the physical structure of the city, such as Rithchanda­neth’s sculptures of mushrooms, which are meant to symbolise urban developmen­t. Other pieces focus on the people, such as Salleh’s portraits, made as part of a “social practice” in which the artist drew somebody he interacted with on the street but otherwise had no relation with – like a street noodle vendor. Salleh then gifted a copy of the portrait to the person in an attempt to “break the isolation” the city can create.

Painter Rena Chheang, meanwhile, drew from her experience at a nonprofit working with street children for her seven paintings – representa­tions of emotional states conveyed by dripping streaks of paint over bisected busts.

“The dripping gives it a depressive vibe to it,” she explains.

Jerónimo’s concept for the show began as just a collaborat­ion between him and Chheang, but the pair decided that it would be more interestin­g to incorporat­e a range of voices and, on opening night, have a participat­ory dialogue from 7pm.

“The idea is to use the exhibition as a trigger: OK, what’s life in Phnom Penh? How is it shap- ing the relationsh­ip of people? . . . How is Phnom Penh shaping our existence in the city?”

Indenticit­y opens on Sunday at 5pm at Meta House, #34 Sothearos Boulevard with the screening of Cambodia 2099 scheduled for 7pm. Support came from the Heinrich Böll Stiftung Foundation.

 ?? SUPPLIED ?? A layered photograph by Miguel Jeronimo of the casino Naga 2, a symbol of opulence, over a Cambodian woman.
SUPPLIED A layered photograph by Miguel Jeronimo of the casino Naga 2, a symbol of opulence, over a Cambodian woman.

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