Main Exhibition

SPECTROSYNTHESIS II – Exposure of Tolerance: LGBTQ in Southeast Asia


By Bangkok Art and Culture Centre and Sunpride Foundation
Opening Reception: Friday 22nd November 2019


The Bangkok Art and Culture Centre (bacc) and Sunpride Foundation reveal the full artist list of 58 artists as well as artwork highlights of the group exhibition SPECTROSYNTHESIS II­– Exposure of Tolerance: LGBTQ in Southeast Asia. Opening to the public at the BACC on 23 November 2019, the exhibition will be the largest-ever survey of regional contemporary art that explores lesbian, gay, bisexual, transsexual and queer creative history in Southeast Asia and beyond. SPECTROSYNTHESIS II  is the second stop of Sunpride Foundation’s touring exhibition following the success of its acclaimed SPECTROSYNTHESIS – Asian LGBTQ Issues and Art Now that was presented in the Museum of Contemporary Art, Taipei in Taiwan in 2017.
Differing sexual preferences and gender identities can cause tension in societies. In SPECTROSYNTHESIS II, the curatorial team, led by Chatvichai Promadhattavedi, has selected a strong line-up of artists to create a dialogue around this issue, highlighting how boundaries are shifting, social frameworks are opening and established norms and values are being called into question. Featuring artists from Southeast Asia, alongside artists of Indian and Chinese descent whose cultural influence and migration have helped shape the region, the exhibition provides a context in which the acceptance of LGBTQ communities has emerged, reflecting the region’s unique melting pot of cultural and religious traditions. Exhibiting artists include Christopher Cheung (Hong Kong), Jes Fan (Hong Kong), Balbir Krishan (India), Dinh Q. Lê (Vietnam), David Medalla (Philippines), Ramesh Mario Nithiyendran (Sri Lanka), Arin Rungjang (Thailand), Anne Samat (Malaysia), Jakkai Siributr (Thailand), Hui-Yu Su (Taiwan), DanhVō (Vietnam) and LynoVuth (Cambodia).

New Commissions
A hotchpotch of cultures, ethnicities and cultural beliefs, the degree of tolerance in Southeast Asia varies across cities and territories. In Thailand, where social acceptance of the LGBTQ community is considered high in Asia and is currently moving towards legalising same-sex civil unions, it may come as a surprise that exclusionary practices and rules are not unheard-of, yet these biases are becoming increasingly exposed. In response to this, Thai artist Jakkai Siributr will create an installation of three new large-scale textile works, each measuring two metres, to immortalise the pain of pubescence. The geometric motifs of Quilt Project (2019)are a play on the pink triangles once used by the Nazi party to identify and shame homosexuals­­­now reclaimed by the gay community as a symbol of pride.
Arin Rungjang, who represented Thailand in the 55th Venice Biennale, will create a new five-channel video installation, titled Welcome to My World (2019). Informed by his childhood fascination of a transsexual acquaintance, his work will bring issues concerning diversity and social acceptance to the fore.
Malaysian artist Anne Samat, a pioneer of woven art, will present her commissioned work Conumdrum Ka Sorga (To Heaven), a culmination of the artist’s acclaimed assemblage series. Samat’s trademark androgynous sculpture, a three-metre-long rainbow-coloured train made of woven materials, will reveal the artist’s preoccupation with the ‘ideal form’as well as her desire for the community to rise from the ashes like a phoenix.

Indian artist Balbir Krishan, who once received backlash and prejudice from his artworks about the gay community, will also present two paintings portraying the differences before and after the repeal of section 377 of the Indian penal code that criminalised sex between men.

Selected Highlights
SPECTROSYNTHESIS II will also feature six pieces of photography by the late Chinese artist Ren Hang, who suffered fromdepression before tragicallyending his life in 2017 while his works were on show in Stockholm. The artist employed photography to depict spontaneity, where naked subjects, mostly the artist’s friends, are seen in sexually explicit and sculptural poses. Ren’s carefully constructed photography possess a distinct, Surrealist aesthetic, and yet, despite the colourful scenes of youthful bodies, his images project a sense of loneliness and suppression, mirroring his personal battle with mental illness.
Vietnamese artist Dinh Q. Lê will present three artworks, two of which are in his unique photo-weaving style that isinspired by the traditional grass mat weaving technique as well as a large-scale50-metre-longsculptural work – an image stretched and distorted into an oversized scroll that will hang from the ceiling. Utilising photographs from a variety of sources, these worksdepict the artist’s inner feelings whilst expressing how visual censorship shapes a biased reception and perception of a national identity.
For his installation A Stitch in Time, Philippine artist David Medalla was inspired by his personal memory of a chance encounter with a handkerchief that connected him to a total stranger and one of his former lovers. Audiences are encouraged to participate in the production of this playful and experimental piece that challenges the creative hierarchy as well as the notion of ‘fate’ – an everlasting topic in human civilisation.
Vietnamese artist DanhVō’s sculptural work We The People (detail) (2011–2016) is an exact copy of the Statue of Liberty – a symbol for freedom – that was deconstructed into over 300 distinct fragments scattered in various locations. The work challenges perception and is a reminder that everyone should be judged by the same set of the social rules, especially in regard toindividual freedom and human rights.

Artists List Click
Arin Rungjang's artwork description Click

Catalog Download Click

Public Programmes

Cinema Diverse 2019: GLoW!, 21st September – 19th October 2019
By Activity Department, Bangkok Art and Culture Centre Click

Curator & Artists talk #1: “Behind the Scenes of LGBTQ” , 23rd November 2019, 14.00 – 17.15 hrs.
By Education Department, Bangkok Art and Culture Centre Click

Exhibition talk #1, 7th December 2019, 15.00 – 17.00 hrs.
By Education Department, Bangkok Art and Culture Centre Click

Queer Research: A Workshop, 16th January 2020, 10.00 – 16.00 hrs.
By Bangkok Art and Culture Centre in collaboration with the International Programme in Communication Design (CommDe) of Chulalongkorn University Click

Spectro Dance Battle, 18th January 2020, 14.00 – 20.00 hrs.
By Bangkok Art and Culture Centre and Tentacles Click

LGBTQ in Thai Literature, 26th January 2020, from 13.00 hrs.
By Bangkok Art and Culture Centre in a collaboration with Institute of Asian Studies, Chulalongkorn University Click

Curator & Artists talk #2: “Beyond the Veil of Thai LGBTQ”, Saturday 1st February 2020, 14.00 – 16.00 hrs., and Sunday 2nd February 2020, 14.00 – 16.00 hrs.
By Education Department, Bangkok Art and Culture Centre Click

About Sunpride Foundation
Sunpride Foundation was launched in 2014 with the mission to embrace and promote the rich creative history of the LGBTQ community. The Foundation aims to foster a stronger, healthier and more equitable world for LGBTQ people and their allies; and to encourage and inspire a generation of young artists to take action and create positive changes to the LGBTQ experience by exhibiting and preserving art that speaks to society at large.

FREE ADMISSION
DONATION WELCOMED
DOCENTS AVAILABLE

For more information, please contact

Sunpride Foundation
Website: www.sunpride.hk
Facebook: Sunpride Foundation 驕陽基金會
Instagram: @SunprideFoundation
WeChat: @SunprideFoundation

Bangkok Art and Culture Centre (bacc)
Facebook: Bacc หอศิลปวัฒนธรรมแห่งกรุงเทพมหานคร
Instagram: @baccbangkok
or Exhibition Department, Bangkok Art and Culture Centre
939 Rama 1 Road, Wangmai, Pathumwan, Bangkok 10330
Tel. 02 214 6630 – 8 Ext. 531

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