Monday 29 November 2010

Vibrancy - a forthcoming exhibition by Voon Kim Cheong


There is a tremendous energy and movement which emanates from the works of Voon Kim Cheong - a resonance and a vibrancy which almost catches the casual viewer off-guard with his stunningly beautiful paintings.

In Voon Kim Cheong’s vivacious oil canvases, reminiscent of Italian Futurism, curved kites dart and sway in the wind - tossing and turning amidst turbulent thermals.  Gyroscopically spinning tops whirl and jostle while lively multi-racial drummers pound out the country’s life-beat, reverberating and resonating with a dynamic passion uniquely displayed in a sultry equatorial Malaysia.

Born in 1968, In Kuala Lumpur, Voon Kim Cheong graduated from the Saito Academy of Graphic Design in 1992.  He sought further training as a fine artist and has made a living in illustration, design and painting.
He was included in the Young Artists Exhibition, 1995, in Klang, Selangor and The Philip Morris Group of Malaysia Awards at the National Art Gallery, Kuala Lumpur in 1999.  The following year (2000) Voon Kim Cheong had art works in ‘Little Treasures Art Exhibition’ organised by Klang Fine Art Centre, The Philip Morris Group of Malaysia Awards, again at the National Art Gallery and ‘The First Step’ art exhibition organised by Klang Fine Art Centre, Klang, Selangor.

In 2001 Voon Kim Cheong exhibited in the ‘Open Show 2001’ in the National Art Gallery, Kuala Lumpur, and five years later was part of the 1st Malaysia World Art Tourism Expo 2006 at MITC Ayer Keroh, Malacca.  The following year he took part in the International Art Exhibition 2007 as part of the Malaysia’s 50th anniversary celebrations at the Daiichi Modern Art Gallery in Sungei Petani, Kedah.

As part of an international initiative, Voon Kim Cheong took part in the ‘World of Imagination’ (Vol 2) - an exhibition in the APW Gallery, Long Island City, USA, in 2009.  There his works was part of 2000 paintings, hung in a single gallery, featuring 500 artists worldwide.  That same year he took part in the Malaysian Chinese Art Exhibition, celebrating the 35th anniversary of Malaysia/China ties, at the Cheng Ho Cultural Museum, Malacca.   That year he also had his work exhibited in the Penang Art Society 56th Anniversary Art Exhibition in the Penang State Art Gallery, Penang.  In 2010 Voon Kim Cheong took part in the International Famous Artists’ Paintings Exhibition at the Daiichi Modern Art Gallery in Sungei Petani.

The current exhibition springs from work the artist had done back in 1998 – Rhythm of the Night.  It is a darker piece, more surreal than his later works but, in it, is the love of music – a combining of musical instruments that brings to mind the Chilean surrealist Roberto Matta, the colouration and fluidity of line of Frans Marc (The Little Blue Horses  - 1911) or the dynamics of The Golden Eye by Max Ernst (1948). 
Voon Kim Cheong’s latest work focuses, primarily, on Malaysian drums, drummers and drumming using dynamic rudiments of the ‘curved line’.  Other elements on show are spinning tops (Gasing), flying kites (Wau) and the ‘Performer’ series, accompanied by still life, fishing villages and antique architecture.

Drums and drumming are integral to the races living harmoniously in Malaysia.  A full Chinese drum troupe may consist of 24 drums - 6 representing each season from the first of spring to the great freeze.  Malays use a longer drum called a ‘Gendang’, of which there are more than a dozen different types, used in civil and religious ceremonies.  Malaysia’s Indian population have brought with them the popular drums of India, used in the north and south of that country and there are many other drums used by indigenous peoples. 

I use the idea of drum to represent the sun and moon.  Sun is harder while the moon is soft.  Sometimes when you bang a drum it is hard, and the sound is hard, at other times it is softWhen I paint the images of drumming, I try to depict colours relevant to the race of the drum and drummers, in my work’ said Voon Kim Cheong as he revealed the passion, energy and vitality explicit in the reverberations of Malaysian drums depicted through his rich, evocative canvases.

With influences from Picasso, Cubism and Futurism, Voon Kim Cheong’s art works are reminiscent of those spectacular paintings by master Futurist Umberto Boccioni in their lyrical sweeps of movement and dynamic colouration.  Voon Kin Cheong’s latest works have his figures spring with gusto from the canvases, aided by carefully placed colour dynamics and racing shapes which immediately engage the viewer.

Even in the simplicity of black and white, Voon Kim Cheong’s work explodes with a painterly intensity seldom seen in a young Malaysian artist.  Whether dancers sway, drummers beat; kites drift, or tops spin Voon Kim Cheong’s works are about delicious movement, vibrant energy, a resounding passion for art and a love for life.

Airey Watercolours and Thundering Hooves


Khoo Khay Tat was born in Penang in1938.  At twenty-two he had success in an exhibition entitled Six Young Artists, in Penang (1960).  In 1986, the National Art Gallery exhibited the artist’s work and, during the next decade, he held many exhibitions including several memorable showings with the Penang Watercolour Society - which he had joined in 1986.

From 20000 to the present Khoo Khay Tat has been prolific with his work.  He has held nearly thirty exhibitions in countries as far ranging as Taiwan, China and Japan, culminating in his current exhibition in Kuala Lumpur. 
 
In 2001 he won an award at the 20th Japan Modern Art Association, in Osaka, and in 2008 he was part of the Malaysian contingent of artists chosen to attend the 4th Exhibition of New Impressions of Asian Art, in Henan, Zhenzhou, China. 

This current retrospective spans an artistic career of some fifty years and, in this way, is also a poignant landmark for the artist.  Khoo Khay Tat, from his early years in the 1960s as a budding young artist, to his highly successful time as a watercolourist and through to contemporary times as an internationally renowned artist demonstrates his skill as an accomplished master, able to successfully turn his hand to any medium and elucidate any subject.

Khoo Khay Tat’s, richly deserved, fiftieth year retrospective exhibition presents a variety of new works from his delicately sensitive watercolours to his vibrant oils.  In this way Khoo Khay Tat has recorded and interpreted his loves and his environment in an ever increasingly captivating way, drawing his audience into subjects which have alerted his attention and engaged his well practised eye.

In the esteemed contemporary company of Penang artist Sylvia Lee Goh, Malay expatriate Ali Rahmad and Perak’s superlative painter Yeong Seak Ling, Khoo Khay Tat is also a self taught artist.  He is untainted by the art school factory mill and able to develop his own unique style of work, independent of academy and artistic confinements - which he does with increasing style and panache.

From early in his career as an artist Khoo Khay Tat has presented stunningly graphic representations of Malay kampongs, he has studied nature and depicted hard working fishermen dragging water-logged weighty nets across dazzling beaches and superb watercolour images of his home town – Penang.  Trees, flowers, birds - all are captured in stunning detail, with mesmerising colour.

Yet Khoo Khay Tat’s acutely artistic eye does not only gaze upon Fishermen, nature and kampongs.  The artist has become noted for his evocative, yet sensitive, renderings of buildings, especially in his light, airy, watercolour creations which at once capture reality as it is presented but also hint at a re-captured past forever encapsulated in Khoo Khay Tat’s watercolour wash techniques, and skilled artist’s observation.  

The last few years have shown Khoo Khay Tat developing an immense love for oil painting as well as new directions for his watercolour, and acrylic work.  In many of his later oil canvases the artist has revealed a deep love of horses, especially through images of thundering thoroughbred mounts, their heels kicking dust as they pound toward the gallery visitor who is trapped, unable to take their gaze away from the race and the magnificent rushing animals. 

However, Khoo Khay Tat’s horses are not the docile mounts of Sir Alfred Munnings or the equestrian studies of George Stubbs, but a fine array of stunning images – naturalistic and fantastic, giving praise to all things equine.

As time canters past, the artist finds a greater fascination with horses of all kinds, be they the small Mongolian mounts in China, the fine Arab horses used for breeding or racing or horses of the imagination.  Horses in all styles spring from the artist’s diligent eye and practised hand, delighting those who gaze upon his works.

Over five decades Khoo Khay Tat has developed his artistic ability, formulated it to captivate as well as sooth his audience.  In this exhibition, coinciding with the artist’s seventy second birthday, he allows his gallery audience to luxuriate in a collection of some of his very best equine works, with a small sample of his other works and some of the artworks which inspire him. 

Tuesday 16 November 2010

Postcards from Another Reality


Galeri Petronas, secreted on the third floor of the Kuala Lumpur City Centre (KLCC),  reveals an exciting new exhibition.  It is the other worldly work of Penang artist Chan Kok Hooi displayed from 12th October 2010 to January 9th 2011.

That nugget, that little hidden gem of an exhibition, within the mainstay of the general Petronas Galleri is a small exhibition which is well named, tucked away, as it is, virtually out of sight. It belongs to one of Malaysia’s most exciting young artists – Chan Kok Hooi. It is the exhibition - I SEE(K) YOU.  To discover this gem the visitor has to negotiate an exhibition of landscapes, through a virtual maze and literally SEEK out the splendours of Chan’s painstaking detailed work, but it is well worth the effort.

It was to have been a much larger exhibition but it was necessarily shortened to make way for more work in the landscapes exhibition.  It some ways it was a cruel blow to the visitor, for Chan has been recognised for his talents across the world – recently London and Taiwan, soon Singapore and New York and for his home country to diminish his exhibition is somewhat short sighted. 

Within Chan Kok Hooi’s fascinating works there are gross elements of superb pictorial comedy embedded within the more recent works produced by that young master surreal fantasist.  While mostly appearing as decaying postcards, vague memories of perhaps a digital time lived, these works are snapshots of a world to one-side of commonplace reality, a land where the Asian version of the ‘Microsoft messenger’ icon lives along with his 3D icon family and 3D icon pets. 
 
We witness the humble lives of simple 3D icons, set in Asia – with ball heads, three dimensional triangular bodies and arms with no hands.  We frequently see typical Asian bathrooms, un-flushed Asian toilets, Asian hallways where family pictures hang from the walls as if to fall at any moment, family pets carrying other ball-headed creatures, young perhaps, abattoirs where captives are bound by microphone cord forced to perform into poised microphones amidst a backdrop of freshly killed carcasses, blood dripping into a plastic bucket.

There are murder scenes where liver-pocked ball-heads have their head staved in with a durian, their ghost seen exiting the body while a figure sits on the bed having watched TV until the channel closes.  More bathroom scenes, yet more bathroom scenes as we realise that the bathroom is central to life, the cleansing and excreting processes involved, enabling us all to get through the day of seemingly endless cubicles – ‘boxes little boxes ...and they’re all made out of ticky tacky, and they all look just the same’ with boringly repetitive computer screens.

It is a chess board.  The gallery floor is a chessboard.  As the figures in Chan Kok Hooi’s canvases are but pawns in some celestial chess game demonstrated by the black and white squares on many floors of the paintings, so to the gallery visitors move white square by tentative black square, to and fro, canvas to canvas.  I wonder if any of the many visitors to this show are aware of the delicate game they enter.

In one sense it would have been easier to replicate these images using computer generated imagery (CGI) or modelling programmes like Maya, 3ds Max, Carrara or even lightweight programmes such as Bryce 3D but no, Chan Kok Hooi chooses to deliberately and diligently paint his images with acrylic paints on various surfaces including, for this exhibition, jute.

Chan Kok Hooi is, as many talented and able people are, a quiet, humble man.  His day to day persona is the Clark Kent to his artist Superman, the more unassuming and modest the man seems so the artist in him makes imaginative leaps and creative bounds leaving us all breathless and wondering at this modern day super hero of a painter.  Like many modern Malaysian artists Chan Kok Hooi is beginning to be known, and appreciated, around the world.  His meticulous style of painting prohibits a rash of gallery openings, but the paintings that we, the viewing public, do come across are to be savoured for their intricate detail and painstaking work, barely revealing a brushstroke or the ‘hand’ of the artist.

This is the artist’s triumphant technique, and the final trick to capture the audience with his engaging works of art.  While the size of the works (often 122centimetres by 153 centimetres) baffles an entire audience expecting small postcards, and the computer monitor-like ‘buttons’ on the frame of each piece give a very 21st century dimension to the images, that final illusion of the hidden artist’s hand completes the fantasy that we have stumbled upon postcards not from the edge, but from another reality - the secret life of the computer icon, or the day to day life of the chess pawn.

The exhibition I SEE(K) YOU by Penang artist Chan Kok Hooi is currently running at Galerie Petronas, 3 rd Floor Suria KLCC, Kuala Lumpur from 12th October 2010 to January 9th 2011.