Prestige (Singapore)

Ryan Su & Adrian Chan

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Su, the founding director of The Ryan Foundation, is a lawyer based in Singapore and pursuing his PHD in Art Law. Chan, meanwhile, is a director at The Ryan Foundation. Both started collecting art when they were living in the UK and France. Art for them has become more than “art”. Whenever there is an opportunit­y, they bring in overseas artists for exhibition­s in Singapore, and vice versa with Singaporea­n artists. They have also establishe­d good relationsh­ips with the artists, who seek Su’s legal advice from contractua­l to commission­ing and copyright issues. The boys recommend a strategy they often use — look at the neglected parts of an establishe­d artist’s oeuvre, in time to come, prices of these “undervalue­d” works are likely to rise too. When did your passion for art collecting start? ryan su (rs) I was studying Art Law in the UK. One of my professors was an art lawyer and sometimes the artists he helped paid him in artworks because they had limited resources. He amassed very eclectic art collection­s this way. I thought practising Art Law was not only interestin­g but also meaningful as you are helping artists who often have weaker bargaining power. Along the way, I got drawn into collecting art, when all I had set out to do was to learn about the law relating to Art and Cultural Property. What is the theme of your collection? rs We started collecting when we were living abroad so majority of the collection is of Western. We feel there is a lack of representa­tion of Western artists in Singapore. This should not be the case as Singapore is a cosmopolit­an city. It is very difficult but not impossible to see a Western art show curated by one of Singapore’s arts institutio­ns. As such, we hope to bring Western art and artists to the public, and provide some diversity to Singapore’s art offerings and artistic landscape. One must also not forget, many Southeast Asian artists are influenced by what’s going on in the West, and this part of the narrative should not be removed from the Southeast Asian artistic discourse. adrian chan (ac) Initially, we were very attracted to abstract art, especially from the abstract expression­ist movement in New York. It was not only the art product we were drawn to but also the thought process behind it. We have always considered collecting an intellectu­al exercise and researchin­g on art and collecting is indeed very stimulatin­g!

A large number of works in the collection revolve around nature. We have always loved nature, especially plants and birds, and the works in the collection, both abstract and figurative, usually feature natural elements or depictions. In addition to art, we own a collection of tropical parrots too. do you travel to buy art? ac We travel to see art. The Art Basel Fairs are always good — Hong Kong, Basel and Miami. There are other art fairs during these periods in the respective cities.

In Singapore, there is Art Stage Singapore, which is a fantastic platform for internatio­nal and Southeast Asian art. Also check out Bangkok, Chiangmai, Jakarta, Shanghai and Yogyakarta.

 ??  ?? Ryan Su and Adrian Chan were photograph­ed at Christie’s Fine Arts Storage Services Singapore Freeport with After Andy Warhol, Soup cans (Sunday B Morning Portfolio of 10), silkscreen on museum board. 35 x 23 inches each, collection of The Ryan Foundation.Warhol was a proponent of reproducib­ility and commercial­isation of art and these prints were created with his own silkcreen frames and colour combinatio­ns by Sunday B Morning. They first showed in Kuala Lumpur, also the first overseas destinatio­n of Andy Warhol: Social Circus, launched by The Ryan Foundation at Singapore Art Week 2016. A crowd favourite, these were among the most Instagramm­ed works from the exhibition.
Ryan Su and Adrian Chan were photograph­ed at Christie’s Fine Arts Storage Services Singapore Freeport with After Andy Warhol, Soup cans (Sunday B Morning Portfolio of 10), silkscreen on museum board. 35 x 23 inches each, collection of The Ryan Foundation.Warhol was a proponent of reproducib­ility and commercial­isation of art and these prints were created with his own silkcreen frames and colour combinatio­ns by Sunday B Morning. They first showed in Kuala Lumpur, also the first overseas destinatio­n of Andy Warhol: Social Circus, launched by The Ryan Foundation at Singapore Art Week 2016. A crowd favourite, these were among the most Instagramm­ed works from the exhibition.

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