
Bui Cong Khanh, Stamp on Me, 2004, performance with 2 two stamps—"Yes" and "No", 2 hours, NIPPAF Festival, Japan © Courtesy the artist
Moving Pledges presents works by Southeast Asian artists who use art as a means to probe social and political power structures. The exhibition comprises participatory and performance art, photography, video and installation. Works employ aesthetics and conceptual frameworks—sometimes borrowed from the state—to prompt discussion about the systems of authority that regulate daily life.
Produced over four decades (1977–2018), the works show the artists’ persistent belief in art as a conduit for social and political empowerment. Jakkai Siributr’s Changing Room (2017) invites audiences to try on military jackets embroidered with images of violence experienced by Muslims in Thailand’s deep south. While aesthetically seductive, Scandals (2014), a series of hand-stitched slippers made of spent bullet cartridges by Filipina artist Josephine Turalba, are also painful to wear. Indonesian artist FX Harsono presents his pistol-shaped rice cracker installation (1977), one of the region’s earliest participatory artworks.
Opening Date: Fri 19 Oct 2018, 6:30pm – 8:30pm
Exhibition Period: Sat 20 Oct 2018 – Wed 23 Jan 2019
Venue: Earl Lu Gallery, Institute of Contemporary Arts Singapore, LASALLE, 1 McNally Street
Opening Hours: 12:00pm – 7:00pm, Tue to Sun, closed on Mon and public holidays
When: 19 Oct 2018 - 23 Jan 2019,
By: LASALLE College of the Arts