ArtAsiaPacific
May/June 2018

ArtAsiaPacific
May/June 2018

ArtAsiaPacific

Courtesy ArtAsiaPacific.

May 1, 2018
ArtAsiaPacific
May/June 2018
www.artasiapacific.com
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In honor of ArtAsiaPacific’s 25th anniversary, our focus this year is on looking forward and backward, while still savoring the effervescence of the present moment. 

This juxtaposition is reflected in the main Features of our May/June issue. From the present, we introduce Istanbul-based artist Cevdet Erek, whose conceptual, architectural installations are derived from his reflections on sound as a marker of time and social progression. His projects have been staged around the world, including in the Pavilion of Turkey at the 2017 Venice Biennale. 

In our cover Feature, we pay homage to the work of nonagenarian Hon Chi Fun, a Hong Kong modernist master. Hon was the first Hong Kong recipient of the John D. Rockefeller III Award in 1969, and developed a steady following for his brightly hued, expressive paintings that document Hong Kong’s changing physical and social landscape—from its subtropical jungles to the search for cultural determination. 

In our Young and Emerging artists portfolio, loosely themed around the idea of new spiritualities, we look at the work of Shen Xin, Ramesh Mario Nithiyendran, Mountain River Jump!, Zadie Xa and Waqas Khan. In our 25th-anniversary special feature, Then and Now, we mine AAP’s archives for articles about influential projects that have made a lasting impact. This issue’s article starts with mention of a 1994 text by Hou Hanru, who covers the difficulties Chinese artists face working in the Euro-American-centric art world. Also noted are pieces discussing the early video works of New Zealand-Māori artist Lisa Reihana; the use of Indian vernacular language in the paintings of Bhupen Khakhar; an interactive filing system, developed by new-media artist Romy Achituv, based on readers’ emotional response to books held in Tel Aviv’s Garden Library; and Singapore’s rising talent Robert Zhao Renhui and his practice of assimilating fictional zoological studies into popular culture.

Rounding up the Features section, our special column Inside Burger Collection chronicles the career of gallerist Maria Bernheim, who relates the trials and tribulations of presenting contemporary art in Europe.

In Essays, Hyunjee Nicole Kim re-examines the oeuvre of Yoshiko Shimada, a Japanese feminist artist whose public intervention Becoming a Statue of a Japanese Comfort Woman (2012– ) is a performance-protest criticizing the Japanese Imperial Army’s sexual slavery camps during the Second World War, and a tribute to the survivors who still face discrimination to this day. 

Our Profiles section spotlights painter Niyaz Najafov, whose expressive, figurative works are informed by his checkered youth growing up in Azerbaijan, and Syrian-born, London-based photographer Hrair Sarkissian, who explores war, conflict and memory. We also meet the exuberant collector-couple Kim and Lito Camacho, whose outlook on amassing contemporary art—from Yayoi Kusama to Fernando Amorsolo—comes from the family’s strong background in the arts. 

Elsewhere in the magazine, filmmaker and North Korea expert Nicholas Bonner files a Dispatch from Pyongyang; artist duo Slavs and Tatars write of their fascination with the “bad boy” of German philosophy, Johann Georg Hamann, in One on One; and in The Point, MIT’s Media Lab Design Fiction group director and new-media artist Sputniko! argues for alternative outcomes for the development of the human race.

Our Reviews section covers the Biennale of Sydney, the first Manila Biennale, the traveling show “A Beast, a God, and a Line,” which debuted at the Dhaka Art Summit and is on view at Para Site in Hong Kong, and the Solomon R. Guggenheim museum’s survey of Vietnamese-Danish artist Danh Vō in New York. In the Book Review, Wilfred Chan looks at volumes by Byung-Chul Han and Hito Steyerl, respectively examining contemporary culture through our addiction to smoothness and polished veneers, and the rapacious appetites of tech-obsessed consumers and art viewers.

Finally, in Where I Work, managing editor Ysabelle Cheung explores the Manhattan studio of Rina Banerjee, known for her playfully surrealistic sculptural mashups. As Banerjee was preparing for her midcareer touring retrospective that opens at the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts in October, she reflected on the importance of time’s passage during the creative process: “You get braver about what you really want to do in your work, and this allows you to really enjoy it more without worrying about it.” 25 years on at AAP, we couldn’t agree more.

Subscribe to the print edition or buy digital copies on iTunesGoogle PlayZinio or Magzter. Subscribers can access our entire back-issue catalog in ArtAsiaPacific’s Digital Library. Download the ArtAsiaPacific City Guide app today to be in the know about events and openings in 53 countries and territories across Asia, the Pacific and the Middle East!

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