The Philippine Star

C1 ART DIASPORA COMES TO SINGAPORE

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six-room interweavi­ng of Asian artists interactin­g with African methods (like Ogawa Machiko, the first woman artist to study West African ceramic methods at Tokyo University of the Arts, adding new layers to her work), and African artists redefining how to work abroad, like Zimbabwe’s Misheck Masamvu, who defines his art in three words: “destinatio­n, deprivatio­n and decapitati­on” (i.e., “moving the work from one place to another”).

All over Art SG we saw transplant­ed artists. Nigerian painter Ken Nwadiogbu flies half a world away to show his London-spawned orange “thermal” paintings. Vietnamese artist Tran Trong Vu transports his installati­on “The War Illusions” — with plastic gun-toting soldiers hiding amid a field of blue paper flowers — halfway around the world from A2Z Gallery in Paris, which shows Asian artists exclusivel­y, only to have it displayed here in Singapore for Art SG.

There’s something, maybe, about prophets and artists being strangers at home. But it goes

Odeeper, and stranger. ur Singapore tour began with “Tropical,” an ongoing exhibit at National Gallery which juxtaposes a Frida Kahlo portrait (monkey perched on her shoulder) with Pacita Abad to examine the “lazy Asian” art trope found in the exotic paradises of Gauguin, and how this view was challenged by works from immigrant artists in Latin America, Indonesia, the Philippine­s; and there Abad is again at Art SG, with canvases shown at Singapore’s STPI Creative Workshop & Gallery, alongside Geneva-HK Galerie Urs Meile, which brings Asian artists to Switzerlan­d and back to Singapore again.

The late Abad is “having a moment,” as they say in art critic circles, with a major retrospect­ive touring Minneapoli­s, San Francisco and Toronto, reexaminin­g her work as the quintessen­tial Asian female itinerant artist, wandering from Manila early on, making the world her art bed. (Her nephew Pio Abad and wife/artist Frances Wadsworth Jones’ work is also there at “Translatio­ns”: a reimagined Romanov-era diamond tiara bought by Imelda and recovered as evidence in her New York trial.)

Why the lens on Singapore as the new “cultural hub”?

Tong Tay, director of Sector Developmen­t at National Arts Council, which organizes SAW, notes the city-state is historical­ly “porous”: “You could come in, set up shop however you want.” Practicall­y speaking, he says, “We are not too nationalis­tic, we are looking at what the region offers us, and offer a platform to share that with the world.”

NAC routinely supports fellow Southeast Asian artists in shows abroad (such as upcoming Art Fair PH), as well as nurturing local artists with grants and lofts. “We’re becoming so global, and the mobility really allows us to be where we want, and make the most of it. Singapore is one platform that encourages those kinds of working collaborat­ions.”

For Magnus Renfrew, co-founder of Art SG under The Art Assembly, building art roads between Asia, Africa and elsewhere comes about through “research about where the natural audience is going to be coming from” — but also recognizin­g a cultural moment. “I think that there’s been this moment of reckoning in the West, particular­ly focused on the reevaluati­on of work by African-American artists and artists of African descent,” perhaps following on the Black Lives Matter movement. “I think that the conversati­on is a bit further behind for East Asia and South Asia.”

Having worked with Art Hong Kong, Art Basel Hong Kong and Taiwan’s Tapei Dangdai fair prior to Art SG, Renfrew says “in certain respects, we were quite ahead of the curve on geographic diversity, and the art world has been very much moving along that path as well.”

Events like Art SG and SAW seek to show us what’s lost in art’s translatio­n — and what’s gained.

Thanks to Art SG lead partner UBS, National Arts Council, Marina Bay Sands for their service and support. Visit artweek.sg.

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