{"id":7339,"date":"2015-10-28T13:24:40","date_gmt":"2015-10-28T05:24:40","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/weiling-gallery.com\/gallery\/?post_type=portfolio&amp;p=7339"},"modified":"2015-10-28T13:24:40","modified_gmt":"2015-10-28T05:24:40","slug":"cover-story-strokes-of-life","status":"publish","type":"portfolio","link":"https:\/\/dev08.mm-sb.com\/web04\/portfolio-item\/cover-story-strokes-of-life\/","title":{"rendered":"Cover story: Strokes of Life"},"content":{"rendered":"<div id='artists-title'  class='avia-section av-av_section-142ff43b7600746a6e970fde5cf91c57 main_color avia-section-default avia-no-border-styling  avia-builder-el-0  avia-builder-el-no-sibling  avia-bg-style-scroll  container_wrap fullsize'  ><div class='container av-section-cont-open' ><main  role=\"main\" itemprop=\"mainContentOfPage\"  class='template-page content  av-content-full alpha units'><div class='post-entry post-entry-type-page post-entry-7339'><div class='entry-content-wrapper clearfix'>\n<div class='flex_column av-av_one_full-2a9015ff38129c418a3f2eafba3e9512 av_one_full  avia-builder-el-1  avia-builder-el-no-sibling  first flex_column_div '   ><section class=\"av_textblock_section \"  itemscope=\"itemscope\" itemtype=\"https:\/\/schema.org\/CreativeWork\" ><div class='avia_textblock  '  style='font-size:14px; '  itemprop=\"text\" ><p><span style=\"font-family: open sans thin; font-size: 25px; line-height: 24px; letter-spacing: 1px; color: #333333;\">The Edge, 27 August 2008<br \/>\nCover story: Strokes of Life<\/span><\/p>\n<div style=\"font-size: 14px; line-height: 24px; color: #666666; text-align: justify;\">\n<p>Good storytellers are truly a rare and marvellous lot. We can all remember instances of being spellbound by masterful raconteurs who have left us with deep impression of the encounters that even with the passage of time, the memory of them lingers. They captured our imaginations, aroused in us a spectrum of emotions and perhaps even inspired us to be better than who we are \u2014 all through the seemingly simple act of telling a tale.<br \/>\nAnurendra Jegadeva is one such storyteller, but not in the way you\u2019d expect. He doesn\u2019t tell his stories verbally or through the written word, but through one of the most ancient forms of storytelling \u2014 with pictures.<br \/>\nThe 43-year-old of Sri Lankan Tamil descent is one of the foremost narrative artists in Malaysia who forged a name for himself as a painter and profiler of Malaysian Indians. His first solo exhibition, titled First Works, was shown at the Australian High Commission in 1993, and since then, he has participated in numerous solo and group exhibitions in Malaysia and Australia to critical acclaim.<br \/>\nI met him at the Wei-Ling Gallery in Brickfields one sunny afternoon, where his solo exhibition, Conditional Love: Painted Stories, is on display. \u201cCall me Anu,\u201d he says, as he extends his hand in a firm handshake. His round, pleasant face sports an easygoing smile, and his friendly and personable demeanour makes me feel completely at ease. His eagerness to show me his works and tell me all about them is charmingly childlike, and when he suggests a walk around, I readily agree.<br \/>\nAt a casual glance, the 24 works on canvas and paper seem disparate from one another. There are lyrical depictions of brides with grotesque vampire teeth set against barren landscapes, an Indian priest holding a broken Ganesha head, portraits of Indian men and women in various settings or none at all, and one of the late Loga Arumugam of the Alleycats. Rich in symbolism, the paintings\u2019 message was not immediately apparent to me, as they seem to speak of a thousand things at once.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"http:\/\/weiling-gallery.com\/gallery\/wp-content\/uploads\/2015\/10\/cl-news-a1.jpg\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"alignnone size-full wp-image-7330\" src=\"http:\/\/weiling-gallery.com\/gallery\/wp-content\/uploads\/2015\/10\/cl-news-a1.jpg\" alt=\"cl-news-a1\" width=\"150\" height=\"228\" \/><\/a><\/p>\n<p>Anu uses the example of a Chinese altar to explain the correlation of the paintings. \u201cIn a Chinese altar, there\u2019s a central deity, and around it are all the things that serve it, from the oranges to the cup with the candle and the incense holder, all of which are complementary. They\u2019re all quite separate things, but they all come together. And that\u2019s what the paintings are like. There are all these things that come together to find a way to work with each other.\u201d<br \/>\nIn Anu\u2019s case, the \u201ccentral deity\u201d of his new body of work is love. He explains that he started with the idea of painting love stories and that emotion is explored in its various forms and interpretations. A self-professed TV addict, Anu draws extensively from popular culture as well as current events in the nation and globally. \u201cI think it\u2019s a world gone mad everywhere,\u201d he says. \u201cThere\u2019s so much happening now and the media is always throwing things at you. That kind of sensory overload was what I wanted this exhibition to be like, almost like surfing channels. But the starting point is always myself \u2014 it\u2019s me responding to it; it\u2019s my dialogue with the news.\u201d<br \/>\nHis way of trying to understand it all \u2014 though he\u2019s quick to point out that he doesn\u2019t have any answers \u2014 is by putting it into the form of stories and translating them onto canvas. \u201cMy process is stories \u2014 larger stories that relate to all of us as people within the context of where we live, but told in a very autobiographical voice. That\u2019s the only way I can make sense of it,\u201d says Anu, adding that the tales he weaves into his paintings are often very personal in nature, stemming from his reflections on life and from his family.<br \/>\nOne work, The Secret of Life, has his parents facing each other, with arrows pointing to both of them and a cockatoo on a heart above them. It is his way of depicting the notion of compromise. He elaborates, \u201cMy mum had a cockatoo, but my father hated the bird. I just used him as a starting point but this is very much a commentary on Indian middle class families in Malaysia. I\u2019ve just used my parents as bouncing balls, but in their personal lives, in their traditions within the community and in their place in the nation as well, it\u2019s always been about compromise.\u201d<br \/>\nWhile some stories are personal in nature, others are things he concocts that surround a particular issue. In Playful Priests, he tackles the issue of Indian temples being destroyed, but rather than looking at the temples, he looks at the priests. \u201cSo what do these priests do now? Do they go on holidays on AirAsia?\u201d he asks amusingly. \u201cI make up these scenarios in my head, and the stories I spin are often ridiculous, but they are starting points. I think it\u2019s a way of tricking people into thinking about an issue.\u201d<br \/>\nIn two startlingly poignant pieces, Conditional 1 and Conditional 2, one sees a side profile of Datuk Seri Wan Azizah Wan Ismail looking askance at an FRU guard, who\u2019s painted on a separate canvas. On the surface, it seems to be a commentary on what this woman has had to go through, but Anu says the focus is not so much the political side of things. \u201cI think this is the greatest love story of our generation. Really, 10 years of this going on and on? But I didn\u2019t want to make this about (Datuk Seri) Anwar (Ibrahim). I put the FRU guard here and looking away because I didn\u2019t want the whole idea of oppressor and victimiser, but of how his role is quite unconditional as well, as far as she\u2019s concerned. It\u2019s a very confusing time for us, and I wanted to capture that confusion here, to juxtapose the two,\u201d he says.<br \/>\n\u201cIt was the only thing I did reasonably well from the time I was young,\u201d Anu says deprecatingly, when I ask when he knew he wanted to be painter. His grandmother was a painter and spending time with her while growing up had an influence on him. But it was Datuk Ibrahim Hussein\u2019s Retrospective exhibition at the National Gallery which he viewed in secondary school that clinched it. He was so taken by those works, and that\u2019s when he knew he wanted to be a painter, \u201cjust like Ibrahim\u201d.<br \/>\nAt a time when a career in art was not the most lucrative or promising, Anu found it simply amazing that his traditional Indian parents allowed him to go to art school at Oxford Polytechnic in London and paid his way through. He says, \u201cThough they were traditional in every sense, they were really forward-thinking in that way. And it was never easy for them. There were times where I didn\u2019t want to be in art school anymore, didn\u2019t see the point in it and all of that. They actually went through a lot of trouble for me to find my way,\u201d he relates.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"http:\/\/weiling-gallery.com\/gallery\/wp-content\/uploads\/2015\/10\/cl-news-a2.jpg\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"alignnone size-full wp-image-7331\" src=\"http:\/\/weiling-gallery.com\/gallery\/wp-content\/uploads\/2015\/10\/cl-news-a2.jpg\" alt=\"cl-news-a2\" width=\"150\" height=\"100\" \/><\/a><\/p>\n<p>When he returned to Malaysia in the late 80s, the local art scene, though thriving, was still very much in its nascent stage. The landscape hadn\u2019t developed enough to the point where it could sustain individuals who wanted to be full-time artists. A general lack of awareness prevailed among the masses when it came to Malaysian art, which translated to a lack of support for artists and their works. Anu points to the inadequate profiling of Malaysian artists as one of the main culprits.<br \/>\nHence, artists during that time had to have day jobs to sustain themselves, while their artistic pursuits took a back seat. Anu taught art at his alma mater, Methodist College, upon his return and painted on the side. But he soon enrolled himself to do law part-time through University of London\u2019s external programme. \u201cI was an artist with no money. How was I going to get married?\u201d he laughs. \u201cWhich respectable Indian family would allow their daughter to be married to someone like me? It was all those issues, and also sustaining a living as an artist.\u201d<br \/>\nAfter obtaining his law degree, he continued to teach and paint, but then decided to apply for a job at The Star where his cousin, Eddin Khoo, was working as a journalist and who was having the time of his life \u201cmeeting the most exciting people and travelling\u201d. He got the job, and Anu spent 10 years at the daily writing features on food and art, taking off for a year to concentrate on painting but then going back because he missed it all. \u201cIt was a fantastic platform for me,\u201d he says of his years as a journalist. \u201cThe exposure I got working in a newspaper for 10 years couldn\u2019t have been replaced.\u201d<br \/>\nWhile Anu could only afford to be a part-time artist in his earlier years, today that situation is changing. \u201cNow the market allows artists to be full-time artists,\u201d he says. \u201cThere\u2019s much higher awareness, which comes with the fact that art is a much bigger commodity than it was before, as an asset and as currency.\u201d<br \/>\nThe commodification of Malaysian art, spurred on by the boom in Asian contemporary art on a larger global scale, has been instrumental in raising the profile of local artists and their works. Anu sees it as a major factor that is driving the local art movement and even creativity. There is now more of an incentive to create where very little existed before. \u201cIf you look at poor countries, there\u2019s no incentive for artists. If they do [create], often it is tourist art. But if you want art to be made seriously, you have to have the infrastructure to support it and part of it is money.<br \/>\n\u201cNow that there\u2019s interest in art as a commodity rather than just a cultural product, institutions like Galeri Petronas and Balai Lukis Seni Negara have woken up, and we are adapting to the new situation. We also now have more private and commercial galleries than ever before, stemming also from a rise in more knowledgeable and interested collectors. I think it\u2019s very exciting. I don\u2019t think the issue has ever been that there are no exciting artists here \u2014 they just haven\u2019t been supported enough and that\u2019s why it\u2019s been difficult,\u201d says the obviously elated Anu.<br \/>\nIn 1999, Anu\u2019s wife was offered a job in Melbourne, Australia, and the family decided to relocate there. Anu enrolled at Monash University and did his studio masters, staying on after that to join the faculty and work as a curator for the university gallery. The life they led in Melbourne was a good one \u2014 they lived in a house they owned in a nice part of the city and the people they met were open and welcoming. But there seemed always to be something missing, Anu recalls \u2014 a feeling of disconnect somehow.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"http:\/\/weiling-gallery.com\/gallery\/wp-content\/uploads\/2015\/10\/cl-news-a3.jpg\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"alignnone size-full wp-image-7332\" src=\"http:\/\/weiling-gallery.com\/gallery\/wp-content\/uploads\/2015\/10\/cl-news-a3.jpg\" alt=\"cl-news-a3\" width=\"150\" height=\"227\" \/><\/a><\/p>\n<p>\u201cIt just happened incrementally. At first to go away and study while my wife worked was fine, but then you realise you\u2019ve been there for seven years, and suddenly the prospect of never coming home was just hard to come to terms with. Every time we came back for a break and went back, rather than getting easier, it got more difficult,\u201d shares Anu, adding that the emotional connection to KL and Malaysia was a bond that did not weaken by distance or the passing of time.<br \/>\n\u201cIt\u2019s not so much family or anything, as they come to visit all the time, but a sense of place. I think a sense of place is very important because all the stories that are important to me are only relevant here as an artist,\u201d he explains.<br \/>\nHis works during that time were certainly reflective of where his heart and soul truly lay. One series of paintings he did in Australia that was exhibited here was entirely on rice cookers and food. \u201cThe rice cooker is really a migrant deity. It was always placed in the hall, and eating became the central thing for migrants because that is a slice of home. That feeling never went away for us.\u201d And so in 2005, the family packed up and moved back to KL.<br \/>\nAnu currently works as senior curator for Galeri Petronas, an institution he holds in high esteem. \u201cIt\u2019s everyone\u2019s dream really to work in a gallery of that stature,\u201d he gushes. \u201cAs an artist, it\u2019s fantastic to be a part of this organisation and part of a team which has built the gallery to the point it was at but now is ready to take it to another level. We\u2019ve really done that. Tengku Nasariah [Syed Ibrahim], our director, has really pushed for that over the last two years. It\u2019s been fantastic.\u201d<br \/>\nAnd just like before, even with his full-time position at Galeri Petronas, he paints as well. Conditional Love: Painted Stories is his first solo exhibition since his return from Australia and is a series that took him a year to develop. How does his current works compare to his earlier ones, I ask.<br \/>\n\u201cI have a style that was developed 20 years ago, and it\u2019s very tied in to 20 years ago. It\u2019s just developed like that,\u201d he says, as he gestures a straight line. \u201cI\u2019m very much in my infancy in many ways. I\u2019ve always done other things, so I don\u2019t have a huge body of work. But the things I make I\u2019m serious about, and I think I have a very important body of work.\u201d<br \/>\nHe continues, \u201cI haven\u2019t done that much work, but this is the time for me to be doing that work because I\u2019ve reached a level of maturity now in my thinking process. If you ask me where or how I have changed, of course as a painter, you can\u2019t help for things to develop incrementally. The scale of the paintings has evolved and they\u2019re much more ambitious, but it\u2019s not like I\u2019ve moved from being a painter to an installation artist \u2014 I\u2019m still very much interested in painting. Whatever other mediums that interest me, they\u2019re always in the context of a very classical approach to painting. But it\u2019s in the telling of the story, the use of symbols, that are a lot more succinct and clever than they were.\u201d<br \/>\nHe adds that while many are quick to criticise the censorship imposed on local artists, he sees it as an avenue for a more ingenious form of creative expression. \u201cIt\u2019s not like we can\u2019t do things, but we have to do things in a different way, to go around it. Now that, I think, is the strength of Malaysian art. Often we are forced to have to think inventively, and that process of how I tell the story has become for me much more mature than ever before.\u201d<br \/>\nEvery one of us has individuals in our lives who in one way or another were instrumental in helping us come to where we are today. When I field that question to Anu, he contemplates for a moment. \u201cThis is a very dangerous question; I hope I don\u2019t leave anyone out,\u201d he says, half jokingly. \u201cIbrahim Hussein, though I don\u2019t know him well enough, has been a sort of yardstick, and I love his work. There have been people in galleries, such as Valentine [Willie] and Beverly [Yong, both of Valentine Willie Fine Art] who really encouraged me when I first started out \u2014 they played a really integral role.<br \/>\n\u201cWhen I stopped painting for a while, Datuk N Parameswaran, the Malaysian High Commissioner to Singapore, forced me to start painting again. He used to organise exhibitions and he loved my old works and he wanted me to be in those shows. You need encouragement like that. People like [Lim] Wei Ling, this gallery, have been really instrumental. Even though I\u2019ve only been here for a year, it\u2019s been fantastic. From a teaching point of view, there are two people: Redza Piyadasa and Jolly Koh. Both have been a considerable influence and had a hand in my development.\u201d<br \/>\nOn the homefront, the artist has a nine-year-old daughter who is artistically inclined, just like her father. Anu says his wife and daughter are the best judges of his work \u2014 they are often critical, but always right in the end. \u201cMost of the time, they\u2019re pretty spot on. Everything from aesthetics to philosophy and content-wise, they\u2019re very good judges of what I want to say.\u201d<br \/>\nAnu doesn\u2019t have anything planned yet for his next solo exhibition but is currently concentrating on making works for group shows. In the midst of all this, he finds time to indulge in his favourite pastime \u2014 watching television. \u201cTV is such a wonderful reference point. I waste a lot of time watching it, but all this has come out of that,\u201d he says, referring to his artworks. \u201cI know everything on Nickelodeon. In fact, the kids\u2019 channel is much better than what we\u2019re getting on adult TV.\u201d He starts naming shows he enjoys, such as SpongeBob SquarePants, Cow and Chicken, Fairly Odd Parents and Samurai Jack. \u201cI find that language quite beautiful, to be able to appeal to adults and children at the same time. My work is like that \u2014 there\u2019s a childlike storytelling quality to it that I really cherish.\u201d<br \/>\nIt is this very same quality that resonates with both art lovers and critics, because no matter how old we get, we\u2019ll never tire of a good story.<\/p>\n<p><em>Conditional Love: Painted Stories is on exhibit until Sept 4 at Wei-Ling Gallery, 8 Jalan Scott, Brickfields, KL. Call (03) 2260 1106\/7 or visit www.weiling-gallery.com for more information.<\/em><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<\/div><\/section><\/div>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"","protected":false},"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","template":"","tags":[],"portfolio_entries":[5],"class_list":["post-7339","portfolio","type-portfolio","status-publish","hentry","portfolio_entries-news-2"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/dev08.mm-sb.com\/web04\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/portfolio\/7339","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/dev08.mm-sb.com\/web04\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/portfolio"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/dev08.mm-sb.com\/web04\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/portfolio"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/dev08.mm-sb.com\/web04\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=7339"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/dev08.mm-sb.com\/web04\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/portfolio\/7339\/revisions"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/dev08.mm-sb.com\/web04\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=7339"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/dev08.mm-sb.com\/web04\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=7339"},{"taxonomy":"portfolio_entries","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/dev08.mm-sb.com\/web04\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/portfolio_entries?post=7339"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}