Sunday, January 4, 2009

Painting

Painting
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Looking at painter Gede Mahendra Yasa's work in the Taxu 2008 exhibition in Sigiart gallery, South Jakarta, one can see an abstract painting and a realist one at the same time.
The painter, popularly known as Hendra, produced a pseudo-abstract realist painting in his work Plototan *2, depicting giant colorful paint splotches across a white surface. The random arrangement of colors -- orange, green, blue and yellow -- gives an abstract feel to the painting, while the photographic features of the paint make it very realistic.
Hendra is one of four Balinese contemporary painters of the Taxu Art group exhibiting their work at Taxu 2008, with the theme "Painting Rejuvenation".
Agus Sumiantara, Ketut Moniarta, and Dodit Artawan also join the exhibition, which runs from Dec. 13 to Jan. 10.
Like Hendra, the other artists also display works that break away from the traditional Balinese painting style.
According to curator Asmudjo Jono Irianto, Balinese painting has become established in Indonesian modern art. Modern Balinese painting reflects the individual and personal, while at the same time incorporates inheritance.
"It's interesting in Bali. We see a syncretism between modernism and tradition in painting," Asmudjo says.
Members of the Taxu group, however, distance themselves from the traditional ways of Balinese painting and have set out with their own style.
The group's name, Taxu, is taken directly from the Balinese word taksu, which is often used by Balinese artists to refer the essence and profundity of art.
Taxu Art group was founded in 2001 by 13 young Balinese artists who were then students at the Indonesian Art Institute in Denpasar.
The group aimed to initiate a movement to fight against the hegemony of art in Bali.
Asmudjo in the exhibition catalog writes, "At a glance, it seems that the way in which the Taxu Art Group moved into the circle of contemporary art has been quite peculiar: by rejecting the contemporary art potentials that they have precisely inherited.
"It could very well be that the Taxu painters have deliberately abandoned their local potentials to enter the contemporary art realm in ways that are more challenging to them.
"On the other hand, their rejection of the traditional identity can also be seen as an effort to liberate themselves from the burden of tradition," Asmudjo says.
The Taxu 2008 exhibition is the group's second, with only four members remaining in the group.
In the exhibition, Hendra plays with elements of painting. His focus this time was paint itself.
Asmudjo says Hendra was revisiting painting techniques. He wanted to make people think about how he paints rather than the subject of his painting.

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