{"id":7607,"date":"2015-11-07T14:53:49","date_gmt":"2015-11-07T06:53:49","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/weiling-gallery.com\/gallery\/?post_type=portfolio&amp;p=7607"},"modified":"2015-11-07T14:53:49","modified_gmt":"2015-11-07T06:53:49","slug":"read-catalogue-essay-choy-chun-wei-unexpected-trails-by-june-yap-curator-institute-of-contemporary-arts-singapore-2007","status":"publish","type":"portfolio","link":"https:\/\/dev08.mm-sb.com\/web04\/portfolio-item\/read-catalogue-essay-choy-chun-wei-unexpected-trails-by-june-yap-curator-institute-of-contemporary-arts-singapore-2007\/","title":{"rendered":"Read catalogue essay \u201cChoy Chun Wei: Unexpected Trails\u201d by June Yap, Curator, Institute of Contemporary Arts Singapore, 2007"},"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-7607'><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;\">Choy Chun Wei: Unexpected Trails<\/span><\/p>\n<div style=\"font-size: 14px; line-height: 24px; color: #666666; text-align: justify;\">\n<p>\u2018Finally, architecture is a dangerous profession because it is a poisonous mixture of impotence and omnipotence, in the sense that the architect almost invariably harbours megalomaniacal dreams that depend upon others, and upon circumstances, to impose and to realise those fantasies and dreams.\u2019 \u2013 Rem Koolhaas<\/p>\n<p>Sanford Kwinter in interpreting the work of Koolhaas, describes his mode of operation as ways \u2018to convert optimism into danger and to make that danger speak\u2019, he continues, \u2018architecture becomes dangerous when it forgoes all that is \u2018pregiven\u2019 \u2013 in this case fixed types and predetermined matter \u2013 when, rather, it takes the actual flow of historical conditions as its privileged materiality (not the habitual discrete domains of geometry, masonry, stone and glass), and works these, adapts these through transformations and deformations, in order to engender and bind its form. The effect of danger derives here from the fact that this radical view of materiality is a perfectly active, fluid and mobile one: it describes a materiality that actually moves and changes as it is worked, one that envelops and releases its own spontaneous properties or traits, carries its own capacities to express itself in form \u2013 all beyond the arbitrary reach of external control.<\/p>\n<p>Malaysian-born artist Choy Chun Wei\u2019s works have been variously described as \u2018urbanscapes\u2019, \u2018mappings\u2019, \u2018imaginary scapes\u2019, \u2018cityscapes\u2019, \u2018urban encrustations\u2019, \u2018emotive private landscapes\u2019, and \u2018fragmented narration and shattered surfaces\u2019; descriptions that attempt to capture his method of overlapping, layering, assembling and deconstructing the space around him into the space of the canvas. The notion of cartography applied to his work goes beyond physical location and into the conceptual and hypothetical; it is a cartography of boundary, definition and resistance that the artist engages with, that of \u2018discovering new potential in existing conditions\u2019. This act of sifting through the driftwood, the fragments, the remains of the system, picking through the ordinary and the consumed takes on a markedly different quality when compiled and framed in his work, it becomes, as in Koolhaas\u2019 optimism, an affirmation of life, of \u2018the wildness of life \u2013 of the life that resides even in places and things.<\/p>\n<p>Representations of landscapes as an attempt to participate in or envision the environment, presents a form of a worldview, reiterating, accentuating and validating a way of seeing the world, or imbuing space and surroundings with particular desires and attributes. It is a simultaneous process of emptying and filling a site that gives it the potential to be a highly charged domain. In Chun Wei\u2019s early works from 2001 and 2002, we find these landscapes populated with a density that is almost oppressive. In the \u2018Link-House\u2019 series (2001), the demarcations of space are hard, boundaries appear immovable, and a certain breathlessness pervades the allotments. In a similar way, within the \u2018Construction\u2019 series, we find these boundaries further weighed down by a vertical development of the space from the base of the painting, expanding upwards and intensifying into fantastic citadels that remain sealed off to the eye, dissuading approach. (Fig.1) The artist describes this period of his practice as a more pessimistic time that became reflected in the largely monochromatic greys used, and the depiction of \u2018dead looking buildings\u2019 and \u2018static living objects\u2019.<\/p>\n<p>From around 2004, Chun Wei\u2019s works took a new direction \u2013 a different plane is introduced, on the one hand becoming less organised around the subject of spaces such as in houses, facades, kitchens, and on the other hand shifting from a vertical orientation to a more horizontal dimension. The accumulation of materials and layers of the work is realised as weightlessness upon the surface of the canvas rather than endeavours to build up and conceal, while pointing to an obscured interiority. It appears as if the artist enters into direct dialogue with the pictorial space itself, rather than in exertions from without. The shift during this period results in explorations of landscapes and gardens in the \u2018Constructed Landscape\u2019 series, creating textured surfaces that flatten and allow for a greater visual engagement with the work. With aerial views, the work takes on a more lofty and bountiful feel, generously spreading across the canvas, the use of collage and the layers of paint becoming a means to develop the effect of a spirited and organic growth rather than encumbrance. This change according to the artist began with \u2018Constructed Landscape: Murmur of the Idyllic\u2019, a work that won the Juror\u2019s choice award at the National Young Contemporary Exhibition at the National Art Gallery in December 2004, a delicately nuanced work, with a calm and gossamery attractiveness. (Fig.2) The work parallels developments in the artist\u2019s own experience of leaving home and setting up his own abode, creating a familial environment for himself. Another development around this period saw the inclusion of found materials such as in Feeding Machine (2006) and works such as \u2018Living Momentos Series: Speed Passages\u2019 (2006) (Fig.3) where drinking straws, plastic disposable cup covers, bottle caps, cigarette packs and packaging are found drifting above the juxtaposed texts and images of collaged print materials. Not a smoker himself, he however sees the cigarette butts he incorporates into the works as \u2018beautiful cylinders\u2019, harbouring a lingering trace of the person whose breath it seems to still carry. Recalling Arte Povera\u2019s exploration of commonplace, humble and ephemeral materials, these works also attempt in employing these ubiquitous trimmings, to dialogue with the conditions of the city, where a disposable culture renders objects and experiences as fleeting and provisional. This sense of openness and acceptance towards the variety and approach on materials transforms the surfaces of his work into active spaces, where contestation and conflict occurs; the work self-consciously seems to deprecate the efforts taken to incorporate these layers and the great amount of detail. Yet the method of incorporating these signs of the urban consumer remains pleasing to the eye through the use of colours and resins that give the works a light-hearted feel.<\/p>\n<p>This increasingly emotive orientation in Chun Wei\u2019s work appears through his residency at Rimbun Dahan in 2006, as well as a deeper consideration of abstract ideas and the relationships that can be evoked through his works. In \u2018The Construction of Metaphysical Site I\u2019 (2005), \u2018Changing Mindscapes\u2019 (2005) and the \u2018Mental Sketch\u2019 series (2006) (Fig. 4), strong colours or deliberately muted shades, though less forbidding than the monochromatic greys of the past, are used in a freer fashion, creating almost unstable conditions within the work that invite greater visual engagement. As the artist describes of the effect he was looking for in his choices of colours used as both \u2018spatial and subtle\u2019, however more telling perhaps is his method of working. He characterizes it as a construction rather than a picture, composed of painting, pasting and cutting, though not in any particular hierarchy of methods, and moving from section to section, working quite closely to the canvas, only stepping back occasionally to view the full breadth of the work. Chun Wei\u2019s relationship to his works is one that is inherently immediate and personal, he undertakes the task of expanding the possibilities of the materials he has on hand, again as the Arte Povera artists did, into a process that attempts to find a visual language of his own, a process that he admits he finds pleasure in as well. While not in the formal language of Angela de la Cruz\u2019s paintings, stretching action painting and the limits of the canvas, and probably more akin to German artist Kurt Schwitter\u2019s collages and assemblages constructed from materials he had taken off the streets, Chun Wei\u2019s works contain a certain spontaneity and randomness, yet there is a sense that the direction the work takes isn\u2019t quite as casual as it seems. Chun Wei\u2019s explorations of materials and attempts to fuse them with acrylic gels and resins into the landscapes and perspectives he produces sees the inclusion of straws, plastic coffee swizzle spoons, tags used on bags for bread with their use-by dates visible, texts and images from magazines, packaging materials, newspapers, cardboard sheets, bottle caps, traces of the double cheese burgers he consumes and sawdust in the most recent works presented at the exhibition at Wei-Ling Gallery. Hardly precious items, but in the hands of the artist they become curious and mutable. Speaking of moving through matter and looking for new possibilities, in relation to architecture but applicable to art as well, Kwinter describes a vitalist universe where \u2018by manipulating the focus, viscosity, direction and \u2018fibrosity\u2019 of these material flows, complex natural and artificial reactions take place, and from this, the \u2018new\u2019 and the unexpected suddenly become possible. All techn\u00e9 is at bottom the husbanding and manipulation of these fluid relations to produce new shapes of order\u2019.<\/p>\n<p>Within Chun Wei\u2019s new works presented at this exhibition is found a refreshing dynamism that seems to have begun with a series produced for the Art for Nature 2006 exhibition. Titled \u2018Glitterati\u2019 and \u2018Glitz and Glamour\u2019, the works enter into a dialogue with the urban environment picking up on its confluences and flows of media, through the incorporation of materials from popular magazines such as Her World, HELLO, LifeTV, Le Prestige and Marie Claire. Naturally these magazines were not purchased for the work, but have fulfilled their usefulness at hair salons; again, as with his earlier materials, these too are transient objects, quickly consumed and as hastily tossed aside. Navigating the barrage of advertising imagery, the artist continues his survey of the consumer environment, interspersing these with other printed materials from corporate instruction booklet, annual report charts, sale brochures, flyers and catalogues. \u2018Trappings\u2019 (2007) a triptych and \u2018Fabricate and Parade\u2019 (2007) (Fig.5) following from the mentioned series also sees the introduction of the body into the work, incorporating faces, eyes, mouths, arms and legs from fashion and trend magazines including Couture, Female, Her World, OK!, Stuff, Vogue, Inside, Legend, the Malaysian Women\u2019s Weekly, Cleo, Juice and New Tide. The flurry of news and announcements found in the popular media that stridently impresses upon one\u2019s consciousness emerges as splintered tracts in shattered reflections upon the canvas. I have had the privilege of watching these works develop, the progress of layer upon layer, transforming the canvas from abstract swatches of colour into a highly detailed and condensed compilation; spaces that were once solid hues were gradually overlaid and plated such that only slivers and fractions remained, though this time less as if a landscape as a kaleidoscope, drawing patterns and reflecting relationships across the variegated surface. The work seems to herald another shift in Chun Wei\u2019s work, from the vertical composition, to a flattening and expansion of space, to the present as a multi-dimensional theatre in flux, where act of creation is an attempt to see beyond the immediate, the boundaries and limits of the objects, paints and resins. While still bearing the trace of the architecture of scaffolding that so fascinates him \u2013 the notion of temporary and mutable frames and forms, these recent works seem to present a less than idyll landscape. As bodies and figures converge and diverge on this unbounded surface, they appear as recesses and apertures, tracking across the broken surface and lending a narrative feel to the works. Introducing a new depth to the canvas surface, the works take on a texture that demonstrates a maturation of the artist\u2019s process and his attempts to find new limits and boundaries to operate from. No longer a simple landscape, or fragments of spaces, the recent works build upon the process of returning or circling, as the artist describes, \u2018akin to the looping of a movie strip\u2019. While land and landscapes have been associated with the body in analogy and transposition, in Chun Wei\u2019s works, they do not merge, and it is this tension between the boundaries of one body (figure) against another body (space) that makes it compelling. Embedded within the work, one encounters texts the artist has found. Without endorsing their values, these texts bring a certain humour to the work, gently chastising our consumer-oriented and unexamined way of life. \u2018Improve your immune system and total well being\u2019, with Royal Jelly with Ginseng, says one; \u2018Washing instruction, handy tips\u2019 says another, recommending that one \u2018read the care labels carefully\u2019. These images and texts, woven together, represent the impressions and expectations that often hamper our attempts to be as we would otherwise, diverting us from our own interpretations.<\/p>\n<p>In describing Koolhaas\u2019 method of working and his optimism, Kwinter draws an analogy with fighter pilot Charles Elwood Yeager\u2019s ability to manage complex maneuvers, pushing the envelope and working on the edge, \u2018for the architect, this means to take your focus to infinity, do not linger on objects but rather enter the space tactilely and prospect the space in search of breaking developments. Scan for changes and fluctuations, then respond as if part of a cycle, as if you had always been a causal part of those flows\u2019. Chun Wei\u2019s recent works appear to operate as well on the level, developed with a keen sensitivity to the course that the work can take and at the same time challenging and transforming from its original ambitions. In \u2018Intimate Wall\u2019 (2007) (Fig. 6), creamy colours are daubed gently over the found text polished with the glazed yellow paint, creating an unexpected subtly dappled effect that may be seen as a further development of his earlier \u2018Mental Sketches\u2019 series. Similarly in \u2018Organic Tracks\u2019 (2007) (Fig. 7), his proclivity for topography develops a more rhizomatic approach that briefly surfaces his personal physical and conceptual developments and circumstances, in search for more natural and integral formulations. In teaching pilots how to fly, Yeager is remembered for a quintessentially simple piece of advice, to \u2018fly the bullet\u2019, referring to the condensation of the series of complex decisions and calculations needed in a dogfight into an instinctive response, \u2018don\u2019t even think about turning. Just turn our head or your body and let the plane come along for the ride. When you take aim, fly the bullet into position\u2019, a depiction that seems apt in understanding this artist\u2019s works. Speaking with the artist, it would seem there almost isn\u2019t an end-point to each work, layers of resin applied do not signal completion, and within his studio, any moment might see a work transform further as new elements are applied. Perhaps the works find stability having arrived at the gallery, having left the artist\u2019s hands; but then again, perhaps this is not entirely the case as our eyes sweep across the work, scouring for hidden details. Following a line of sight that is not preordained, we savour the unexpected journey \u2013 of each detail as it rises to our attention, and again as it then drifts and settles back again into the variegated surface, it is a journey that does not seem to end, and one that is gently guided by our own senses.<\/p>\n<p><em>\u00a9 June Yap, Curator, Institute of Contemporary Arts Singapore, 2007<\/em><br \/>\n<em> Images:<\/em><br \/>\n<em> Fig. 1 \u2018Construction Series 7: Fa\u00e7ade\u2019 (2002)<\/em><br \/>\n<em> Fig. 2 \u2018Constructed Landscape: Murmur of the Idyllic\u2019 (2004)<\/em><br \/>\n<em> Fig. 3 \u2018Living Momentos Series: Speed Passages\u2019 (2006)<\/em><br \/>\n<em> Fig. 4 One of the works mentioned: \u2018The Construction of Metaphysical Site I\u2019 (2005), \u2018Changing Mindscapes\u2019 (2005) or \u2018Mental Sketch\u2019 series (2006),<\/em><br \/>\n<em> Fig. 5 One of the works mentioned: \u2018Trappings\u2019 (2007) or \u2018Fabricate and Parade\u2019 (2007)<\/em><br \/>\n<em> Fig. 6 \u2018Intimate Wall\u2019 (2007)<\/em><br \/>\n<em> Fig. 7 \u2018Organic Tracks\u2019 (2007)<\/em><br \/>\n<em> Rem Koolhaas, Lecture 1\/21\/91, in Rem Koolhass: conversations with students, USA: Rice University School of Architecture &amp; Princeton Architectural Press, 1996: p.12<\/em><br \/>\n<em> Sanford Kwinter, Flying the Bullet or When Did the Future Begin, in Rem Koolhass: conversations with students, USA: Rice University School of Architecture &amp; Princeton Architectural Press, 1996: p.68-9<\/em><br \/>\n<em> Ibid. p.69<\/em><br \/>\n<em> Ibid. p.71<\/em><br \/>\n<em> Ibid. p.81<\/em><br \/>\n<em> General Chuck Yeager, \u2018How to Win a Dogfight\u2019, Men\u2019s Health, November 1994<\/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-7607","portfolio","type-portfolio","status-publish","hentry","portfolio_entries-news-2"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/dev08.mm-sb.com\/web04\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/portfolio\/7607","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=7607"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/dev08.mm-sb.com\/web04\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/portfolio\/7607\/revisions"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/dev08.mm-sb.com\/web04\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=7607"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/dev08.mm-sb.com\/web04\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=7607"},{"taxonomy":"portfolio_entries","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/dev08.mm-sb.com\/web04\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/portfolio_entries?post=7607"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}