The Star Malaysia - Star2

his Stamping mark

Chang Yoong Chia’s exhibition at the National Second Art Life Gallery spans a two-decade long career involving paintings, installati­on works and transformi­ng found objects.

- By ROUWeN liN star2@thestar.com.my

THERE is a quilt that has hundreds of faces of dead people stitched onto it, hung from the ceiling and almost touching the ground. This is Chang Yoong Chia’s Quilt Of The Dead, a work-in-progress that commenced in 2002 and drew from obituary photograph­s in newspapers.

Inspired by his grandmothe­r’s passing and the circumstan­ces revolving around her death, this personal project soon morphed into performanc­e art, where Chang embroidere­d these portraits in public as a way to connect with people about the one thing we all have in common with each other: death.

Workshops followed, where he broached the topic with participan­ts while they immortalis­ed a loved one - whether a family member or a beloved pet – on fabric.

Today, the quilt stands as an incomplete project currently on display at Chang Yoong Chia: Second Life, a solo exhibition at the National Art Gallery in Kuala Lumpur.

It has been almost a decade since Chang, 43, last added a new face, but it remains a work unfinished, not unlike his journey as an artist.

Second Life is a survey of his artistic journey so far, a glimpse into what this Kuala Lumpur-born artist has been up to the last two decades and a bit. The works range between 1994 and 2017.

“When I reflect on my work over the years, I often think about how I can expand on them for the future. Maybe use the materials in a different, bolder way, maybe explore more stories I can tell,” says Chang, who graduated from the Malaysian Institute of Art in 1996.

Trained as a painter, he often professes his fondness for oil. But it is evident that Second Life is an exhibition that shows off many different styles and techniques, from painting, painted objects, installati­on, collaborat­ion, and performanc­e art.

The wide-range of works in Second Life, 135 in total, are from the artist’s own collection, with others borrowed from private and institutio­nal collection­s. The exhibition is curated by National Art Gallery’s Tan Hui Koon, researcher/writer Teoh Ming Wah (Chang’s wife) and Beverly Yong (curator/ art consultant).

Each of the curators took on a different section of the show: Tan curated Quilt Of The Dead; Teoh (Flora And Fauna) and Yong (The World Is Flat).

“It is a treat to work with an artist as versatile as Yoong Chia. The exhibition, which showcases many different art forms, is testament to his creativity. He demonstrat­es mastery of so many different techniques and styles, it almost feels like you are walking through a group exhibition! We hope that this show will serve as an inspiratio­n, particular­ly to young artists, and encourage them to explore different forms and ideas in their art practice,” says Tan.

Aside from smaller showcases during Chang’s residencie­s, almost half the works here have not been exhibited in public before, so this will be a treat for followers and newcomers to his work.

“There is a strong narrative element in his artworks. He uses a variety of forms to tell stories, whether depicting them pictoriall­y, sequential­ly, through the use of text, or in his choice of utilising different physical materials. For me, the biggest challenge in curating this exhibition is finding and presenting the underlying message of his oeuvre amongst the many divergent ways of expression he employs, without constricti­ng each artwork’s storytelli­ng potential to mesmerise,” says Teoh.

Chang’s most recent residency was the S-AIR Second Artist Residency Programme in Japan in 2017.

Previous exhibition­s include How Are You? I Am Well at A+ Works of Art in Kuala Lumpur last year, Body Of Water (2016) in Art-U Room in Tokyo and The World Is Flat (2011) at Richard Koh Fine Art in Kuala Lumpur.

For the general public, the strength of Second Life lies in its many curious details and unusual material used. There are his trademark black and white paintings, but there are also paintings on leaves and shells, stamp collages and miniature plastic animals.

Stranger things include a portrait made of termite wings, a web spun from human hair, a rotating egg, a tower of crab shells and a pelt rug-esque work fashioned out of scallop shells.

Take time to discover the smaller works that are perhaps a little unorthodox, but quite delightful in their eccentrici­ty – like that skeleton suspended above a bed

of nails, or that tiny bug wrapped in spider web that is set afloat in a storm contained within a shell.

“I use a lot of organic material, they used to contain life before they died, and I picked them up and made them into art. My works all have identities that can be linked back to memories, especially of my childhood and the impression­s of my surroundin­gs then,” explains Chang.

His fascinatio­n with the transforma­tive potential of natural and found objects is a reflection of his belief in magic.

“And I don’t mean magic like illusions or David Copperfiel­d. It is the sense of wonder and intuition that we all have in ourselves. But we live in an increasing­ly modernised world that dulls these senses. So these days, I try to adopt a more child-like perspectiv­e at looking at the world when making art. Looking back, I would say that I should have trusted my instincts more when I was a young artist,” he muses.

Growing up as a child in a single storey house with a small garden and a vivid imaginatio­n was enough to give him the world. He has fond memories of having many pets, including chickens, turkeys, quails, tortoises, ducks and rabbits, the last of which feature prominentl­y in many of his paintings in this exhibition.

“Much of my younger days was spent in that small space, but I imagined it to be a much bigger world. That could be why my paintings are so packed, there is a lot to look at and so many things happening ... just like how it was in my childhood so many years ago,” he says.

He could just as well be describing Second Life, where his world is as much a world for you to discover. And it is one that is packed with curiositie­s and many other strange, wonderful things. Chang yoong Chia: Second life is on at the National Art Gallery, Jalan Temerloh, off Jalan Tun Razak in Kuala lumpur till feb 24. Opening hours: 10am to 6pm daily. Visit www.artgallery.gov.my for more informatio­n. More info: changyoong­chia.net.

 ??  ?? Chang’s (stamp collage, 2013). — National Art Gallery The Chakra
Chang’s (stamp collage, 2013). — National Art Gallery The Chakra
 ??  ?? Chang’s The World Is Flat (postage stamps, polyvinyl acetate glue, collage, 2010). — Photos: national art Gallery
Chang’s The World Is Flat (postage stamps, polyvinyl acetate glue, collage, 2010). — Photos: national art Gallery
 ?? — SIa HOnG KIau/The Star ?? Chang posing with his Happy Garden (oil on canvas, 2005) painting at the national art Gallery. a detail of Chang’s Maiden Of The Ba Tree series (oil on ceramic spoons, 2007), a work loaned from the Singapore art Museum.
— SIa HOnG KIau/The Star Chang posing with his Happy Garden (oil on canvas, 2005) painting at the national art Gallery. a detail of Chang’s Maiden Of The Ba Tree series (oil on ceramic spoons, 2007), a work loaned from the Singapore art Museum.
 ??  ?? As The Crows Cry (oil on chicken eggshell mounted on clockwork with wooden base, 2008). Final Voyage Of CYC (oil on seashell, insect wrapped in spider web, 2006). a close-up view of Moe The Tiger Killer (oil on crab carapaces and baby scallop shells, 2017). — sIa HOnG KIau/The star Botany Of Desire (gouache on cut dried leaves, installati­on stitched on cotton cloth, 2012). The Leaning Tower Of Teluk Anson (crab shell, oil, zinc sheet, wooden cabinet, spotlight, 2008). — sIa HOnG KIau/The star The Darwin-Wallace Theory Of Evolution (stamp collage, 2010). a visitor looks at Chang’s monoprint art series made between 1996 and 1999. — sIa HOnG KIau/The star
As The Crows Cry (oil on chicken eggshell mounted on clockwork with wooden base, 2008). Final Voyage Of CYC (oil on seashell, insect wrapped in spider web, 2006). a close-up view of Moe The Tiger Killer (oil on crab carapaces and baby scallop shells, 2017). — sIa HOnG KIau/The star Botany Of Desire (gouache on cut dried leaves, installati­on stitched on cotton cloth, 2012). The Leaning Tower Of Teluk Anson (crab shell, oil, zinc sheet, wooden cabinet, spotlight, 2008). — sIa HOnG KIau/The star The Darwin-Wallace Theory Of Evolution (stamp collage, 2010). a visitor looks at Chang’s monoprint art series made between 1996 and 1999. — sIa HOnG KIau/The star

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