Catalogue cards for Pulp: A Short Biography of the Banished Book. Vol I: Written in the Margins by Shubigi Rao. The numbered objects in her installation have corresponding catalogue cards, which is the interactive element of the work, encouraging viewers to discover and read in their own order. There are hidden or underlying elements relating to the history of communism in Malaysia throughout The Kris Project. For example, her footage of a traditional dancer was recorded near the site of the Batang Kali massacre in 1948. As a whole, Au’s piece opens up a new way of looking at the history of our land, particularly during the Emergency.
Untitled (Hua Lamphong) by Thasnai Sethaseree was created using a collage of coloured paper streamers on the robes of Buddhist monks. The Jurors’ Choice Award went to Shubigi Rao for Pulp: A Short Biography of the Banished Book. Vol I: Written in the Margins and Thasnai Sethaseree for Untitled (Hua Lamphong). Rao’s installation includes video clips on monitors, giclee prints with text, ink drawings, books and three texts by a poet, historian and librarian. Her work explores issues surrounding the destruction of books and libraries. Sethaseree’s piece looks like a painting but is actually created using a collage of coloured paper streamers on the robes of Buddhist monks. From a distance, you can see the outline of historic Hua Lamphong station in Bangkok, which alludes to the sociopolitical issues of the artist’s home country. The People’s Choice Award went to Gede Mahendra Yasa for his Batuan-style painting, After Paradise Lost #1. The dense composition depicts the bustle of everyday life, with mini scenes inspired by Western and Indonesian art history.
Lakshmi Sekhar is a writer with the Options desk at The Edge Malaysia