“I see things
around me constantly, like a shadow observer”
Ay Tjoe Christine
Ay Tjoe Christine
The Indonesian artist Ay
Tjoe Christine works in a variety of mediums including installation, sculpture, photography, but it is her
painting, according to the Sotheby’s
Auction House, that has excited international interest. As they
stated in a 2014 Auction Catalogue,” it is the latter [painting] that has
garnered the artist international acclaim, placing her amongst Indonesia’s fast
growing group of young artists who are redefining the country’s contemporary
art scene. Her abstract paintings may be viewed as an existential analysis of
the subconscious, a pairing of ego and mind to unveil the inner workings of her
psyche.”
Ay Tjoe’s painting grew out
of love of dry point etching, the printing technique that has drawing as it emphasis
which is still evident in her painting today. As she told the Luxury
Insider Magazine “Some art disciplines such as
sculpture, painting and printmaking require a lot of patience and tenacity. My
earlier works were dry point etchings, because I like the immediacy of
translating my ideas simply by drawing with needles on a copper plate and
printing straight away. Then I explored with different materials and methods,
and learnt patience.”
It was this
immediacy of expression that led Ay Tjoe into the practice of fine art whilst
studying at the Bandung Institute of Technology.
As the Jakarta
Post’s Carla Bianpoen tells the apocryphal story “in her first year at school where she majored in graphic
art, she thought she would never make it. But instead of quitting, she silently
kept her frustrations to herself. She was lucky that she was noted by a
well-meaning senior at school who saw her talents. But it was only by
triggering her fury through grave offense that he succeeded in having her spill
out her emotions in works that were to be the beginning of her artistic career.”
Over the years Ay Tjoe’s work
has grown to include an exploration of the issues that confront the spectators
of her work and offers her personal reading for their contemplation.
As the Sotheby’s catalogue
states, “A person’s mind knows no limits,
with the imagination the only authority, and it can be implied that Christine’s
paintings are a visual exploration of that world. Throughout her oeuvre, the
artist uses herself as a guide to reveal the mysteries hidden within every
individual.”
Or as Ay Tjoe has said “I’m very concerned about the universal human experience
in this age of globalization and fast-paced living, and I try to explore these
conceptual dialogues in my artwork.”
Tjoe’s current
exhibition Perfect Imperfection is on show at Korea’s SongEun Art Space until the 20th
of June.
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