ShanghART Gallery 香格纳画廊
Home | Exhibitions | Artists | Research | Press | Shop | Space

Arin Rungjang at ShangART Gallery

Source: World Sculpture News Author: Christine Han 2019

Construction workers with helmets, work boots, and protective gear were walking around a scaffold two-stories high, outside the ShangART Gallery in Gillman Barracks. They are a common sight in Singapore as opportunities for infrastructure and construction abound. The scaffolding structure belongs to Arin Rungjang and is part of his latest solo exhibition They Beat Your Father. Specifically, the Thai artist’s sculpture and performance piece was meant to draw our attention to the histories of the traditionally ignored: migrant workers, among others. This first part of a two-part work offers a platform—literally and figuratively—for us to reconsider “the social relations of a community”—Muslim, Indian, Pakistani, and Chinese construction workers living and working in Singapore. Where better to raise the question of the subject of racial and cultural differences than in the case of migrant workers traveling between their places of origin and their new locale in Singapore?

The second part of his work comprises single-channel video showing individual close-up portraits of construction workers in Singapore. The men hold frozen poses: at times eyes blink and hands quiver. Not speaking, their silences are deafening. Rungjang’s text for the show introduces the background of each of them—and it soon becomes clear the Hindu worker is a silenced subaltern, the Muslim worker is a silenced subaltern, so is the Chinese worker. His work acknowledges their dire social conditions—the pressures of racism, political conservatism, identity issues in a foreign country: diasporas are everywhere, but they are always over there: Other.

In another room one might expect to find objects or pictures on the walls, but there is nothing. Only benches with no screen on the opposite wall to look at, but be patient and you will hear soft, intermittent sounds. They are recorded sounds from around Rungjang’s childhood home where he lived with his mother and grandmother after his father’s death. Water drops in front of her room, mother getting her nails clipped, the vibration of the washing machine, frogs and insects, and so on. The artist’s gentle demeanor becomes clear as we get through the layers of his art.

Moving deeper into the show, Rungjang’s other work in a related exhibition Shooting an Elephant and the Leader is housed in a separate gallery a stone’s throw from ShangART. First presented in Shanghai Biennale 2018, the ten-screen video installation traces both personal narratives and social history crossing time periods, cultures, and languages. On entering, five screens hang from the ceiling and confront the viewer with extreme closeup shots of a Myanmar elephant, over white background and from low angles. Two stories unfold, woven together through the shifting reference point of diaspora communities and through narrative links. The artist intertwines a story of a stateless man of Bengali descent born in Myanmar with references taken from George Orwell’s famous essay Shooting an Elephant.

The ambling bull elephant is imposing. To be up close with this majestic animal in an art gallery was exceptionally special for me. When we walk around to the other end of the long room, another memory or spectacle of Rungjang’s imagination is revealed through a four-screen installation where each projection shows, in the order of the back of a head, open palms, murmuring lips, and the lower half body of a Muslim man praying. Nearby, white texts run on a black screen to recount the story of Wahduze Ali. Who or what is he—a representative of the postcolonial Diaspora or a devout Muslim betrayed by human traffickers and forced to become a prostitute? What had appeared as fictional improvisation now appears as the painful recollection of lived trauma?

On the other hand, reading Orwell’s essay is to encounter Rungjang’s way of seeing. Born in Thailand, Arin Rungjang was only two and a half years old when his father was beaten by racists in Germany while he was working with a local company and several months later succumbed to his injuries. “Father said that they were those skinhead racists, thinking that he was a Filipino guy. They hated the Philippines,” says Rungjang. “Racism is a problem everywhere, there are these stereotypes about people of color that are not true.”

Arin Rungjang’s work has provoked thinking about the relationship of Diasporas and cultural politics. With the proliferation of racial and cultural otherness, one of the artist’s most pressing concerns is to find ways for dominated subjects to represent themselves. This show was an attempt to reconnect and raise new questions. We can have a new life, but it is up to us to change the ways we see and think.

Click to download the pdf
Arin Rungjang WSN review.pdf

288.7KB
2020-08-14 13:33


上海香格纳投资咨询有限公司
办公地址:上海市徐汇区西岸龙腾大道2555号10号楼

© Copyright ShanghART Gallery 1996-2024
备案:沪ICP备2024043937号-1

沪公网安备 31010402001234号