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BOH Cameronian Arts Awards

"If we are to change our world view, images have to change. The artist now has a very important job to do. He's not a little peripheral figure entertaining rich people, he's really needed."

- David Hockney
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articles

Ilham Fadhli Mohd Shaimy's "Forever Delayed"

Wing Lim Kok Yoong’s "VIP"

Tsuji Lam's "Manhole - Gone & Going to be Gone"

Hayley West's "Can"

Tobias Richardson's "World Without Us"

Yap Sau Bin's "Taking Over Feng Shui Hill"

Melissa Lin's "The altar where memory coalesced"

George Wielgus's "In Dreams"

Ong Boon Keong's "Someone is looking down on me"

Yeoh Lian Heng's "Drawing Light"

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14. 02. 2008
Houses on the Hill by Zedeck Siew

When I arrived at the gate of Lost Generation Space two days ago, its de facto caretaker, visual artist Yeoh Lian Heng, was putting on gloves and prepping to mow his (artistically) unkempt yard. Spotting me, he immediately knew what I was there for. “You can go in,” he said, though he sounded uncertain. “Since the exhibition they’ve put guards, but see whether they will let you go and look.” He gestured up the road. “The circus people are up there now.”

Lost Generation Space -- the second-last lot on Lorong Permai, nestled in the bosom of Robson Heights -- serves both as a site for exhibitions or performances, as well as a lodging-house for a diverse array of artists. Cyclown Circus, a troupe that does acrobatics with modified bicycles and brass instruments, was just one of Yeoh’s present guests; today, however, these performers had decided to rehearse next door -- in the same place I was here to see.

Walking through a garage-way (heavily graffiti-ed) and up a flight of stairs (engulfed in tree roots) I found myself in the living room of a derelict bungalow. The floorboards had rotted through in places, as one may have expected; more out of place in this tableau were miniature cement mixers, yellow-hued, positioned around the floor’s cavities, pouring plaster as if in a vain attempt to repair the room’s potholes. There was a piece of paper on a wall, indicating that this was the work Ilham Fadhli Mohd Shaimy's "Forever Delayed".

Ilham Fadhli was one of 25 artists involved in “Bangun - Abandon Project”, a three-day exhibition (from February 1st to 3rd, 2008) of site-specific and installation work. The site was Lost Generation Space’s neighbour: a complex of three empty and overgrown buildings. Even though the exhibition was over, I knew the pieces -- like Ilham’s -- were still around, scattered throughout the environs; Yeoh (who also organised “Bangun”) and his fellows had decided to let their art remain, abandoned as the houses themselves.

I had already seen the work, so this current sojourn was merely to satisfy my curiosity -- but before I could venture further, I heard voices. The members of Cyclown, trombones and all, were hurrying down steps that lead further into the compound; behind them was a security guard and a man in office attire. Meanwhile, Yeoh had appeared (how did he do that?) and, shedding his gloves, advised me to leave. He had the harried look of someone steeling himself to negotiate with angry authority.

As I walked out I noticed pieces of A4 paper posted around the empty house. “Action will be taken against trespassers,” they said.


Abandonment

Yeoh had described the particulars of “Bangun - Abandon Project” ’s illegality to me on the evening it opened. As guides walked us through the various works that Saturday evening we were all trespassing on private property; it was a guerrilla project, since the artists had no written consent from the property’s owners. “That’s why we have only three days, and it's on a weekend just before Chinese New Year,” Yeoh said. “Hopefully they don’t come and check.”

“They” would have been corporate suits. The space in which “Bangun” (“Bring your own torchlight, umbrella and wear sensible shoes,” we were warned, in the covertly circulated postcards) happened belongs to a Malaysian multinational that also owns several properties in the Robson Heights area, most of which are now dilapidated. (I asked Yeoh whether I could identify the company; “They are very sensitive about this,” he answered.) Gaining permission for the show meant that Yeoh spoke to two separate departments within the business juggernaut, management and maintenance. “The management people said ‘Better you don’t touch the building,’ ” Yeoh said. His contact in maintenance was more game -- “He said: ‘You just use it, because it’s been abandoned for ten years,’ ” Yeoh told me -- but even that approval was tacit and informal.

The piece that grappled most with the site’s specific issues of ownership was Wing Lim Kok Yoong’s "VIP", a multimedia installation that audiences experienced first in their journey through the compound. It sported a mosaic of faces the artist had pulled from off the Internet; all were of people surnamed with the same surname as that of our mystery corporation’s founder, and all were rigged up to a motion sensor that, when triggered, opened or closed their eyes: a wall of pseudo-anonymous ghosts watching our passage through the space, alternating between passport cheer and embalmed repose.

Some of “Bangun” ’s artists dealt with architectural abandonment directly -- like Ilham Fadhli’s piece; or Tsuji Lam’s photographs of edifices like the Majestic Hotel and pilings in Putrajaya, each in a hole and protected by a ring of sulfur, as if to ward against serpentine developers. Others played with the aesthetics of abandonment -- like the installations of Lost Generation Space’s two current artists-in-residence, Australians Hayley West and Tobias Richardson. In "Can", Hayley commandeered a kitchen area and started enclosing found debris in bright, fruit-emblazoned wrapping paper, trying to convince us that the old and decrepit had a history that was intrinsically valuable. For "World Without Us", Tobias spent two weeks cleaning his chosen room, filling in gaps in the parquet with coloured blocks, then hung up a mobile made of satay sticks -- a surprise retreat against the surrounding decay.

Yap Sau Bin, monopolising what was perhaps the most striking feature of the property, positioned toy soldiers (painted pink) around what used to be a pool area: some guarded a metal bar, a squad paraded under the shade of a tree, an unlucky few were trapped in a Bukit Kepong-like last stand against an unseen foe. Invaders seemed appropriate, considering the site’s history as a Japanese Club, before it was abandoned a decade ago -- but “Taking Over Feng Shui Hill” (as the piece was called) was more interested in tackling the idea that space is politics. Taking over, or merely claiming a geographical location modifies it and every reaction to it. Sau Bin took a drained pool and turned it into this Feng Shui Hill diorama, in the same way the other artists in “Bangun” had turned these abandoned buildings -- dirty, leaky, a magnet for vermin, refuse and drug addicts; all in all, a place one would normally avoid -- into a something that, for a few days at least, we could all say was beautiful in its dereliction.



Novelty

Unfortunately, few of the works in “Bangun” stood out. (This is not at all saying that any of them were disappointing, save perhaps for Teh Leong Kwee’s empty frames, which ostensibly highlighted found beauty -- a stain on the wall, etc -- but ended up being completely forgettable.) Tan Wai Ding arranged disused electronic fixtures in an expansive grid on the upper floor of the property’s clubhouse, and that was pretty; Melissa Lin’s altar of shattered bricks, rocks and twigs collected from around the environs was cute; looking for Chao Harn Kae's little dispassionate plaster faces, and the mud-fashioned fixtures of Chuah Chong Yong, Hoo Keiw Hang, Pauline Siah and Tan Wai Ding's "Recon Project" had the all the fun of an Easter egg hunt.

Pretty, fun, and novel -- and that was the problem. Most of “Bangun” ’s 25 participants were so caught up in the excitement of working in such an unusual site that they forgot to say very much (or anything very well) about it. George Wielgus, in explaining why he piled empty beer cans and monologued, at length, in one of houses, thought that it would have been “something that the space hasn’t seen before,” -- not a very stimulating conceptual justification. The exhibition was conceived so that:

“Through their individual and collaborative art practices, these artists have come together to respond to the abandoned spaces provided for exhibition. Bangun in Bahasa Malaysia means Wake up! Attention! In this project the artists are saying - Wake up and notice the abandonment of buildings (bangunan) in KL!”

Yet what resulted was largely a romance: about the melancholy splendour of a 50-year-old piece of architecture (it was a tycoon’s palatial estate, before it was a club) -- one that hid its scandalous history of love and murder (naturally) like ghosts in between the walls. What the artists failed to realise was that the house didn’t need them to achieve this -- nature had accomplished mystery and discovery far beyond that which was possible of any constructed installation. Lost Generation Space’s contribution was that they provided us with an excuse to explore this space.

The biggest pleasure in “Bangun”, for me, was to step across the cordons that the organisers placed -- it was a guerrilla action twice over, and practically every visitor to the exhibition did it -- to discover spaces that the artists did not use. In the clubhouse at the top of the hill I found a library, with rows and rows of empty shelves, some collapsed, some tilting over menacingly, huddled together as if it was a storehouse of treasure.


Trespass

Yeoh Lian Heng found Lost Generation Space in late 2003. He remembers having to jump through a window to get into the house; it is a testament to his perseverance -- as well as that of several senior and junior graduates for the Central Academy of Art, who were also looking for a studio -- that by April 2004 the new venue looked presentable (only the kitchen roof still leaks, now). Since then, Lost Generation has become one of the Klang Valley’s more important alternative space, what with its hosting of the cheeky, National Art Gallery-snubbing notthatbalai Art Festival -- among other things.

“Bangun” was a long time coming. “I wanted to do something about it since the beginning,” Yeoh told me, when I asked where the idea for such a project came from. Old, derelict buildings -- criminal wastes when such good architecture could be put to other uses -- were clearly the passion of the exhibition’s 25 participants; the inclusion of Penang-based urban poor activist Ong Boon Keong in that roll is proof that the socio-political implications of leaving aesthetically beautiful structures to rot while people sleep on the streets are issues they mean to address.

After-tour discussion, that Saturday, naturally turned to how a project like “Bangun” could possibly make an impact in its community. There were significant challenges: any initiative meant pitting artistic and social needs against economic and political clout; after all, two major arts events in the bowels of the Majestic Hotel in recent memory hasn’t persuaded owner YTL Corporation to begin any restoration. Even being part of “Bangun”, as an artist or and audience-member, already meant we were dipping into (technically) the illegal.

Yeoh seemed to have these considerations in mind when he conceived of his contribution to “Bangun”. His installation, titled “Drawing Light”, brought together several dozen fluorescent light-tubes that the artist had found scattered across the property (he didn’t use every single one; there were more than a hundred), and suspended them for the ceiling; Yeoh chose a room that was situated underneath the pool area, and this enclosure meant that a guide with a torch was required to even find it; the space was barely lit, and entering the maze-like, claustrophobic arrangement of blinded lights was a challenge in itself. It was my favourite piece in the exhibition, because it seemed to embody the necropolitan beauty of the site and the difficulty involved in acquiring this experience for us.

Lost Generation Space plans to orchestrate “Bangun” analogues in other sites; for the time being, Yeoh has already incurred the ire of one real estate developer. Yesterday, he phoned to inform me that they wanted him to dismantle all the installations that were currently left in and around those abandoned bungalows. “So this evening I’m going in to take all the art down,” he said. “If you want to come and see the art again come along with me lah.”

~~~

Zedeck Siew writes for Kakiseni.

“Bangun - Abandon Project”, which ran from February 1st to 3rd, 2008, was organised by Lost Generation Art Space and included 25 artists from Malaysia, Australia, Indonesia and the United Kingdom. It was taken down on February 13th, 2008.

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User Comments

posted by antioxidant water | singapore home loans | confinement nanny, Tue 03.08.201001:45:43 AM
The performance is a little deep for the common folks to appreciate.

 

posted by Tobias Richardson, Mon 03.03.200818:55:55 PM
Re the review - thanks
But the comment that the artist failed to realise the houses didn't need them because nature does it better? confused me.

Does this mean an artist should never photography a mountain because nature does it better, paint a lover because they are already so perfect?????

Artist discover and artist react

 

posted by Busy body, Thu 21.02.200810:31:16 AM
Why must artists pull such stunt? Go to people's property, do a show, then get chase out, get into trouble then claim they have become victim of circumstances. There are many galleries in Kuala Lumpur now, try put this sort of show there and see what you can get. Or better do it in public or government building.

 

posted by Daniel, Tue 19.02.200807:36:34 AM
Its a pity that Lost Gen kena halau by the developer. They should be more friendly to artist type cause, in the west (sigh where else) its been known that having artist type move into slummy areas eventually brings in the galleries, the restos, then the fashion stuff and eventually yuppy types. The whole loft life phenomenon in areas like SOHO (right?) in NY had a lot to do with this. Ironic thing is that artist then have to move out cause the rent will be too high already...

I think the developers here actually know this trick but they do it in a more artificial or safer way. KLPAC is a good example of using the arts to rebrand an unpopular zone. Other slightly less upscale areas would also invite galleries to open shop to raise their profiles. Malls do it too right? Star Hill is a prime example but the Curve has like a 'we'r so hip and cool' thing going on by getting graffiti artists to do controlled murals on their walls. But the oldest story is still Central Market and Annexe. The result is pretty mixed.

 

posted by Zedeck Siew, Sat 16.02.200803:49:20 AM
Hello pang:

Whoa there.

While I tried to persuade him otherwise, Yeoh was quite adamant that the corporation be left unidentified. If it were my own skin under the knife I'd have taken my chances -- but insofar as there may be repercussions for Lost Generation Space, I defer to their wishes. Managing a cultural space, with so little clout and an array of potential threats, is understandably difficult.

Whether such fear or lack of fortitude on the part of the organisers is justified, however, is up for debate. In this case, the artists' desire for evasion is an unintentional part of their overall statement. Is this silence is at cross-purposes to that statement? That's up to you to decide.

"Bangun" did no harm, and this is something that I tried to outline in the course of the article -- in fact, I'd contend that the exhibition, with its stated aims, did too little of anything.

As for memory, you are absolutely correct. Anyone who's had the privilege of seeing Lost Generation Space's vacant neighbour would immediately know that it has played host to "trepassers" of all kinds: wild animals, plant life, vagabonds and graffiti artists. It's owners only mind, now, because a group of people has deigned to bring attention to what they were going in this otherwise wasted space.

Personally, I think that "something wants to be forgotten and the corporation is here to make sure we don't remember," is a needlessly ominous suspicion. After all, the very fact that an embarrassed entity, just because it has traction of whatever kind, may cover up morally-criminal neglect with a blanket of fear and legalese is sinister enough.

(As for the text book simile, tak kena lah. The sin of Sejarah, as a subject taught in schools, is worse: the wholesale misrepresentation / rewriting of historical reality.)

 

posted by Pang, Sat 16.02.200800:59:39 AM
Is it a secret who owns the building -- when it appears the organisers had no problem contacting the corporation which looks after the interest of the owner? What law may you be breaking in naming the late uncle who owned a house that exists in public space? Why such an easy surrender from the journalist?

No doubt the artists have trespassed, but have they done actual damage to the property? All they did was turn an abandoned building into art -- a little irreverent or a little lame depending on whether you like the art. And if anything was in danger, it was the audience in constant peril of falling or be fallen upon. Come on, imagine the building before the artists -- it appears that the owners themselves had done more damage to the building when they left it to rot all these years.

So the whole bullying exercise -- of chasing the artists away, putting up security, asking artists to remove their art -- does not appear to me like it was about preventing trespassing. It appears like it was about preventing memory. Something wants to be forgotten and the corporation is here to make sure we don't remember. Sounds like the Malaysian history text book!

 

posted by Zedeck Siew, Fri 15.02.200820:16:59 PM
Hello Andrew:

What a shame! Damn geography.


However, as far as I was aware, all of Lost Generation Space's fliers and notices -- as well as "Bangun" 's entry in the Kakiseni listings -- gave the exhibition's location accurately as being in Robson Heights ...

 

posted by Andrew Hwang, Fri 15.02.200818:19:05 PM
Incidentally, the venue was not in the Taman Seputeh area (please note the correct spelling) but in Bukit Robson. Some people I know were looking out for the venue in Taman Seputeh but could not find it.

 

posted by Karcy, Thu 14.02.200817:48:54 PM
Readers say: (Good post)
I loved the exhibition, and loved your write-up of it. I'm amused about your mention of the sealed off library; I was one of those people who did not step into it. I'm such a conservative.

 

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