Tag Archive for 'Evil Empire'

Sounds of science! Disembarking disco dude! Cake’s crazy characters cavorting!

The Art of Living In The In-Between is the over-arching title for theatre company Cake’s fifth anniversary celebrations over at Evil Empire.

It sounds all Sun Festival-y but it’s actually a bunch of crazy fun stuff you can’t pin down. It’s got workshops, there’s a weekend pancake brunch (?!), a Madonna karaoke night (?!?!), and a bunch of mini-performance art stuff and video installations. There’s a giant swan outside and one of the doorways inside is, well, slanted.

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Imagining communities! LKY! Boleh! Whale!

This post is quite belated, but I’ve been meaning to talk about a number of exhibitions I’ve caught that interestingly enough work around the idea of narratives and (imagined) communities: Valentine Willie Fine Art Singapore’s Beyond LKY, Evil Empire’s Negaraku Boleh! and Zhao Renhui’s The Whiteness of a Whale at 2902 Gallery.

The discourses of the first two, of course, are somewhat linked while the latter is the artist’s most recent (most cohesive and consistent) foray into meta-fictive photography.

Continue reading ‘Imagining communities! LKY! Boleh! Whale!’


Drawing King! It’s a Queen! Artists mangle classic paintings with markers!

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Old school democracy ruled at Evil Empire tonight where young (and slightly more than young) artists were pitted against each other in a drawing contest – where, for the most part, those who had the loudest backers survived.

Which is basically how the art scene today works la.

And yes, a lass by the name of Teng Yen Lin was crowned Drawing King (Queen).

Continue reading ‘Drawing King! It’s a Queen! Artists mangle classic paintings with markers!’


Going once! Twice! Sold! An art ballot!

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Prior to catching Meg Stuart’s Maybe Forever last Saturday night (which was around the same time as ROJAK 15), I attended one of the most refreshing art events I’ve had over at Evil Empire in Niven Road.

12X was the latest crazy idea from visual artist Alan Oei, the dude responsible for Black Out and Open House (and coming soon, a “Draw-Off” contest among artists, I think).

Basically, it was an art ballot. You pay $48 dollars, get a ballot and pick an artwork by a young artist.

 

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Patterned after a similar event he had attended in Brooklyn, Alan roped in 20-year-old budding curator Berny Tan who gathered some of her young artist friends and others she had spotted at the Culture Push website.

 

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It was quite a casual, lowkey fun affair that started around 4pm. Around 30+ works were available and naturally everyone was eyeing their faves. The selection of works (a mix of paintings, sculptures, photographs and even an installation) were quite uneven – as you would have expected I guess – some were quite strong, others not so much. But as the organizers pointed out, it really wasn’t so much about you as a collector (wah, collector sia!) as it was about finding a “home” for these works.

So brushing off my disappointment at not getting any of my top picks, I eventually got an impressionist painting of Marina Bay Sands.

Monolith is by a 19-year-old dude named See Yong Feng, a former RJ dude who’s now doing NS and plans to go into architecture (Aww nuts! You better keep on painting dude, I made an investment here! Hah!)

 

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Yong Feng painted it about a month ago. “At that time it was a very new building so I thought I’d paint it to record this new monument. It’s quite exciting to see who buys your work, and to actually see all the people who buy artworks. It’s quite interesting. Most of my artworks are photography but since I was told there were a lot of photographs already.”

So anyway, I went from being Saatchi to basically a vandal. In my haste, I erm, sorta pulled out a piece of Evil Empire’s white wall plaster along with the painting. Here’s pro collector Tay Yu Jin’s pic of the aftermath.

 

My prize with a piece of Alan's wall

 

I’m still waiting for them to bill me. So sorry dudes!

A number of interesting works, and I got to meet some of the artists, including 18-year-old Lum En Ci (aka Luca) from Nanyang JC who had this triptych of photographs, each accompanied by, in an attempt to evoke a particular sense of the image, a series of words beginning with S.

There was also Roy Wang, whose digital photograph was one of the more coveted ones.

 

Roy Wang

 

Film producer Panuksmi Hardjowirogo’s family probably had the biggest haul – they generously bought three ballots and walked off with another of my picks!

“I like the democratic process. The idea that you’re there and the idea of chance. I think it’s a great idea to also meet the artists who are doing this. I think this is something that can actually be an effervescent activity in Singapore. I’m very excited to put it up in my house! It’s a very powerful piece.”

 

Courtesy of Evil Empire

 

Yeah, yeah, rub it in will ya Panuksmi…

Her daughter Margo was lucky enough to actually get the piece she was eyeing. “I picked one with the old man in a purple sweater. It was an interesting concept. It was a fun experience.”

Yep it sure was. After the whole thing, you could march on upstairs where some of their other works were also on sale.

And apparently this won’t be the last art ballot they’ll be organising either.

(For more pics and details, Evil Empire’s blog and Facebook page.)


Tang Da Wu finally! FOI’S “nice” art! Evil Empire!

Guess who I finally bumped into when I dropped by the Future of Imagination 06 event at Sculpture Square earlier tonight?

Thom Yorke, Damon Albarn and Frank Black! Not!

But it was just as cool. I finally met Tang Da Wu!

A.k.a. The Artists Village founder and legendary performance artist.

A.k.a. He Who Must Not Be Ignored And Must Get A Solo Show At SAM.

*cough cough again*

I wanted to take a photo with him but Da Wu politely declined, saying he was shy. Hee.

But nehmind, as part of FOI, which is on until Sunday, he’s performing tomorrow, 5pm, at the Singapore Art Museum.

All you art freaks must die-die come okay?

Arts scene documentor extraordinaire Koh Nguang How said the last time Da Wu performed in Singapore at SAM was probably in 1996! That was when he was asked to introduce Montien Boonma at SAM and had snuck in some critical remarks about how the museum picks the works it acquires – with his own performance after the Thai artist’s bowl tower work (which was recently exhibited again) using Chinese teacups and a weighing scale.

Details for all FOI performances here.

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So how was FOI06 Day Three?

I’ve yet to put up some video snippets so in the meantime, here’s an account.

Apparently due to some unforeseen circumstances, not least our lovely erratic rains, the kite flying performance by Juliana Yasin and the Indonesian group Jatiwangi Art Factory at East Coast (then West Coast) Park sort of fizzled out. Although they did fly kites at the last minute – in the rain.

So they were inserted into the night’s schedule at Sculpture Square where they did a number of songs they had written.

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Take note of the dude on the right, who plays some sort of xylophone/gamelan-looking instrument –  which is actually made of random pieces of tiles. That’s because the village JAF came from, Jatisura, is known for its roof-tile industry. And believe it or not, it’s actually in tune.

Their “set” was catchy-feel-good (they even gave away CDs of their songs for free!) and sandwiched between an intense piece by German Boris Nieslony and a wacky one from Kai Lam.

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The former presented this amazing transformation, where he started off with minimal movements not out of place in a contemporary dance piece, but then the movements get erratic and spasmic until he turns into some schizophrenic Gollum, mumbling or screaming to himself, banging on the wall in a series of seizure-like movements.

Kai, meanwhile, did something “nice”. Yeah, he even referenced the conversation I had with him when I did the preview story for FOI in the papers. When I asked him what he was presenting, Kai said he was thinking of doing something, er,  nice.

So while he’s preparing his stuff, he’s also problematising exactly what “nice” means in performance art. The final part of his performance, he dons this costume made of soft toys, stands on the table and starts snipping the toys one by one and throwing them to the audience. The performance also involved a clanging cymbal, a black flag, and two exploding plastic bottles of Coke.

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There was also German duo Helge Meyer and Marco Teubner, a.k.a. System HM2T, who spent a greater part of their time wrapping themselves in two-sided tape. In the dark. Before rolling around outside Sculpture Square.

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A couple of people however pointed out that it would have been a more effective performance had they been naked – the black briefs and boxers looked like those things censors use to, well, censor things. Sigh. So Uniquely Singapore.

Two female artists put on some uncannily similar performances. Mexico’s Elvira Santamaria and our own Amanda Heng both utilised some heavily ritualistic gestures and both were long.

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Had it been slightly shorter and not the last piece of the night, I think I would have liked Amanda’s work immensely. While chaos sorta reigned in the performances of the dudes, hers was structurally so measured and deliberately constructure, yet had enough drama bubbling underneath as she whacked the wall with some rolled-up piece of cloth, covered herself in powder (?), arranged some random household objects and personal items in a single line, et cetera.

What was it exactly about? Er, I have no idea. But I felt something.

Elvira’s meanwhile was a tad too tedious for me. It involved her painting some words on black and white paper using her hair. Yes, her hair. Which she snipped off after.

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Here’s the final product. Which is kinda okay actually.

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But I think I liked the “piece” that followed later. An impromptu collaboration between Jason Lim and Tang Da Wu.

Jason had accidentally kicked the bowl of black ink (?). The spill formed a nice pattern on the floor. And I’m assuming Da Wu couldn’t resist adding a few touches to improve on its aesthetic harmony because here he is “tweaking” it a bit.

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By the way, if you’re going to be in the area, do drop by Evil Empire, the new gallery from Alan Oei, the mastermind behind the Open House (not the Biennale theme, silly) and Blackout events.

The inaugural show is Child’s Play (Or Why Baby Jesus Looks So Strange). It’s got an interesting premise, looking at the idea of childhood (and children) and their (mis)representations. (Don’t forget to read the curatorial notes!)

Granted a lot of the works are basically “rehashed” from Oei’s previous events but for the most part, it does work.

I particularly liked Tan Wee Lit’s “toy action figure” pieces of… Tan Wee Lit.

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There’s also the surprising (but most appropriate) inclusion of Ng Yi-Sheng. His poems are stuck on the wall upstairs and his book Last Boy’s on sale too.

And of course, you cannot not do an exhibition titled Child’s Play without an entire range of paintings by Huang Wei, that uber-mysterious artist of yore.

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It’s at 48 Niven Road (behind Wilkie Edge) and the exhibit runs until April 31. For more details visit here.