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Venue
Yeo Workshop
Date
2017.09.09 Sat - 2017.10.29 Sun
Opening Exhibition
09/09/2017
Address
47 Malan Road
Block 47, #01-25
Gillman Barracks,
Singapore
109444
Telephone
+ 65 6734 5168
Opening Hours
Tuesday to Saturday 11AM–7PM

Sunday 12PM–6PM

Closed on Mondays & Public Holidays
Director
Audrey Yeo
Email
info@yeoworkshop.com

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Fyerool Darma
“Monsoon Song”
Yeo Workshop
[Press Release]

Yeo Workshop is pleased to present ‘Monsoon Song’, the second solo exhibition by represented artist Fyerool Darma. Drawing from the aesthetics of urban subcultures, traditional ceremonies and the folk craft of Singapore, Malaysia and the region, this exhibition brings into collision a range of seemingly hostile sounds, images and objects, and gives expression to the synthetic conformation of Southeast Asian cultures. Like a documenting device making fugitive passage across distance and duration, Darma captures and collages vistas, rememberings and imaginaries too contrasting to compose a cultural singularity. A framed work comprised of text on artificial cowhide imitates the Indonesian practice of printing Arabic calligraphy on goat skin, sculptures are modelled after bunga manggar​ – palm blossoms composed of tinsel, styrofoam and bamboo poles – used in Malay weddings in Singapore, Malaysia, Brunei and Indonesia, an audio piece distorts and loops a violin sample from the P. Ramlee classic “Jeritan Batinku”, an angel wing is handcrafted from the deconstructed material of Aliph sneakers – only ever ‘Made in Malaysia’ and, as they say, ‘Made for Rockers’. Darma invokes multiple articulations of Southeast Asian rural and urban culture, gestures towards the aesthetic commerce between these varied phenomena, but seeks not to resolve their meanings. The exhibition is nonspecific in its feeling, and functions as an open set of works that resists being determined along national lines. If not a bordered entity, ‘Monsoon Song’ then presents itself as a song continually revised by the vessels in which it traffics; a wave coalescing out of archipelagic waters, yet breaking always back into its surrounds. Taken collectively, Darma’s works speculate postnational ways of being together. They give granularity to the connectedness of our social worlds, and moments of communal gathering, feeling and loving that exceed, whilst accounting for, conventional expectations for sovereignty and self-determination.

20170828145153

An extended essay will be published in a catalogue on occasion of the exhibition.