Title: Made
1- Made
- Wianta
- 1949, Bali (Indonesia)
2- Wiantas Bali
- Population 3,891,000 (2010),
- 92.29 are Balinese Hinduism (2000)
- Most of the remainder follow Islam
- Bali is home to most of Indonesia's small Hindu
minority. It is renowned for its highly developed
arts, including traditional and modern dance,
sculpture, painting, leather, metalwork
and music. But been the largest tourist
destination in Indonesia, there was great fear
within Balinese society that traditional Balinese
culture and the Balinese identity might be pushed
to extinction.
3Who is he?
Apuan
- Born on 20 Dec 1949 in the village of Apuan,
Tabanan, Bali - Exhibited at Venice Biennale in 2003
- A multi-modal artist. He works with poetry,
painting, installation and performance art - Strong sense of environmental awareness and
social cultural responsibility (esp. towards
Balinese culture) - Fascinated by the works of Dali and Klee
(developed his own Surrealism)
http//www.baliselection.com/balimap.html
Lake Bratan in Bedugul Bali
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4Traditional Balinese Painting
- Traditional Balinese painting was understood as a
form of prayer, if not to the Gods, then to the
local palace, perceived as an embodiment of the
holy. Artists would thus labor at the palace to
demonstrate their loyalty to the king, or work at
the temple to demonstrate their loyalty to the
religious community. - As in traditional dance and wayang kulit puppetry
the classical paintings acted as a morality play
portraying both good and evil behavior. Heroic
figures were usually on the right side and evil
ones placed on the left. The Ramayana and
Mahabharata, both classic Hindu epics, were the
main themes for the paintings.
5Traditional Balinese Painting
- The theme of traditional Ubud paintings was
around the wayang, including stories of the gods
and popular folk stories. Most importantly, this
art was an expression of the community. Artists
never signed their work, and they were always
proud if their students copied their work. To
have their work imitated meant they had attained
the status of a guru, the highest honor for a
Balinese. - This collective nuance has thus become a kind of
mainstream within the local art world, the point
from which local artists depart and the point at
which they converge. It is also the cause for
lack of change and innovation among Balinese
painters. Artists have remained loyal to their
collective styles, in spite of the input of
scores of foreign artists from Java, Lombok,
Europe and America upon their works.
6Traditional Balinese Painting
Oleg Tambulilingan, by Anak Agung Gede Sobrat.
Courtesy of Bali Bangkit
- The colors were muted in the traditional
paintings but that changed with the advent of
Ubud style paintings. Famous European artists
such as Walter Spies and Rudolf Bonnet, who lived
in Bali in the 1930's introduced vibrant colors,
painting single scenes rather than narrative
stories and paintings of people from everyday
life rather than religious, heroic figures. In
the 1960's Dutch artist Arie Smit encouraged and
instructed many budding artists and created a
naive style of genre painting called "Young
Artists". Today, these famous styles have evolved
and are exhibited in the museums and galleries
throughout the island.
7Wiantas Art
- Philosophical Overview
- Life as Total Artwork he sets out from this
point to seek harmony - Wiantas works are results of his attempts in
producing a harmony that he feels is missing in
reality. This harmony may be missing because of
the Balinese cultures resistance to change.
Balinese culture is resistant to change because
(i) it is very strong and (ii) there is fear of
the loss of Balinese identity. - To Wianta, harmony is missing in reality as a
result of the following opposing forces (i)
Tradition/customs (Balinese) vs
contemporary/modern, (ii) local (Balinese) vs
foreign, (iii) local (Balinese) vs global, (iv)
permanence vs change and (v) religious (Balinese
Hinduism) vs secular
8Wiantas Art
- Philosophical Overview (contd)
- Therefore, through his Art, Wianta advocates
reconciling and evolving with instead of
rejecting the unfamiliar, the new, the foreign
and the strange - Also, Wianta does not want to be trapped in
Balinese Orientalism. He has lain bare the ghosts
of his Balinese subconscious. - Everything is part of everything.
- Calls himself Balinese artist and citizen of the
world
9Wiantas Art
- Background to Wiantas Artisitic Philosophy
- Born into a Hindu family and married to an
influential Javanese Muslim lady, Wianta has
learned that religion can create conflicts and he
therefore prefers philosophy - Violence 1965-Indonesia military took action
against communists - As a young man, he saw how people were killed or
severely wounded. - By the early 90s, Made had become a mature artist
whose concern for social and political issues had
grown to such a level that he felt an inner
compulsion to act and begin supporting victims of
violence, natural catastrophes and epidemics.
10Wiantas Art
- Background to Wiantas Artisitic Philosophy
(contd) - Wianta faces the conflict of defining the Self
freely but still requires society for that
definition. torn as he is between the communal
values in Bali and intense desire for
self-determination. - Peace or harmony is necessary for the Balinese.
The Baliness crave for the state of quietness
they crave in this Island of theGods. - Progress towards a more advanced stage wherein
the lust for power and desire to impose ideas or
achieve prosperity through violence must
disappear. - Violence as a meeting point between desire and
destruction. - His philosophy of peace also reflects the limits
of life space and the power of human ideas.
11Reconciling Seemingly Opposites
- There is no need to talk about God, as God is
always there in ourselves. - His action paintings have roots in dance
calligraphy influenced by Japanese writing signs - Ritual-like (sakti means energy)
- Believes in the self as responsible, creatively
competent individual - His modernity is determined by Buddhist
existential philosophy
12Made Contemporary Art
- Real abundance of culture in daily life
- Constantly experimenting, trying to push
abstraction into a new dimension - His artworks pay attention to form, aesthetics,
rhythm movement tackle global essential
subject matter above, challenge the viewer by
freshness inventiveness.
13Change as a Permanent System
- Asian cyclical concept of time no fracture
between tradition and modernity - His works have no clearly recognizable start or
ending - Change in his work always directed forwards.
14On Religion
- Does not identify himself with one true religion
philosophy of life acknowledges the worth of
every human being. - Global symbols such as crosses, triangles,
swastikas and mandalas.
15Secular Themes
- Openness to other cultures
- Not only interested in possibilities offered by
Science but fascinated by processes leading to
scientific discoveries new technologies - Technology is not an end in itself
16Modernity Universality
- Looks for the fundamental elementary in all
aspects of the visible tangible world - Zero, the void sunya is the ultimate way of
thought, the real knowledge which supercedes all
time-bound opposites - The individual as the storage room of images
- Presents an alternative aesthetic universe,
warning of dangers of a collapsing vital
cultural environment
17Wiantas Art
- Specifics
- His contribution to the development of art in
Bali is his tendency to leave out all realistic
figurative representation while emphasizing the
concept of space, patterned repetition and the
strength of colour which show a structure akin to
Bali which is fresh, glamorous and bright. - In Wiantas works, geometric shapes are filled in
using sigar mangsi (colour gradation) technique
of Balinese painting.
18Wiantas Art
- Specifics (contd)
- Some of his paintings may be described as
Balinese Hindu abstract expressionism - His calligraphy is inspired by various writings
from the East which is then combined with
repetition of dots - In his installation work Made Wianta seems to
make a pilgramage through space and time, beyond
the consciousness of form and events. Wianta
always tries to say the unsayable from the hidden
piles of reality.
19Wiantas Artistic Phases
- Karangasem period (went to Karangasem in East
Bali after short stay in Yogyakarta 1978)1978-84
(impressed by ethnic motifs) - Dot period 1985-90 (Batik, beads decorative
patterns in Asean art Balinese ceremonies
temple decorations) - Quadrangle period 1987-90 (devoted to geometry)
- Triangle period 1988-94 (dominating triangles in
compositions) - Assembling period 1990 (dynamic works of acrylic
on plywood) - Calligraphy period 1987-1999 (Zen-inspired)
- Mixed media period 1992-present
- Installations 1995 present (Deconstruction of
the urban landscape )
202 components of Wiantas Artistic Phases
- Modern rooted in 20th Century, content is
cosmic universal - Postmodern feature the interaction between man,
nature, information technology
212 components of Wiantas Artistic Phases
- Modern rooted in 20th Century, content is
cosmic universal - Postmodern feature the interaction between man,
nature, information technology
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24Karangasem period 1978-84
- Wanted to have it out with a basic element
meeting earth in her virginal forms - Designed his personal motifs
- Transcended his own environment
- -spirits demons of his dreams obsessions
surreally lyrical, representational imagery, in
very differently Balinese images, sensitive and
mysterious, with strength of point and line - Started to develop a formal language by reacting
strongly to simple forms structures
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27Dot period 1985-90
- Characterised by multiple use of colour dots
which shine like glittering jewels - Like pointilism found in work of French
Impressionists - Dots arranged in decorative geometrical
structures
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31Quadrangle period 1987-90
- Squares rectangles dominate allow him to
experiment with structures, colour space - Translating his ideas of repetition and balance
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36Triangle period 1988-94
- Representations of cosmological order in Hindu
religion
37Dot toTriangle Period late1980s-early 1990s
Archetypes
- In the late 80s and early 90s, Wianta used
optical effects derived from combinations of
square, triangular and even circular shapes,
superimposed with layers of lines in colours of
differing graduation. - These works revealed an organization of design in
which line and colour were carefully measured. In
his Archetypes series, Wianta has felt the need
to return to my roots by painting mature
variations of these cubic, linear and rectangular
compositions. These forms he asserts, are the
elemental building blocks that distinguish man
from nature.
38From Ornamental to Architectural
- Core artistic material in the cultural traditions
of Bali is infused with ornamentation, decoration
and this passion is clearly on display in the
work of Wianta - Offers a new dimension to the meaning of
ornamentation - Wiantas work reminds us of Piet Mondrians
Broadway Boogie Woogie (1942-43) in so far as
Wianta also creates a three-dimensional
architectural space. - Whereas Mondrian was abstracting the physical
space of New York, the architectural spaces of
Wianta tend more towards an abstraction of
cultural values, representing the dynamism of
life in Bali, Indonesia and the world. in his
collage of symbols
39From Architectural to Spiritual
- Circle/triangle/square geometrical or symbolic
signs - He transposes the vital energy, soul spirit of
these forms into the visible world - His paintings bear titles related to spatial
time orders - Colour starts to play a very special role in his
architectonic paintings - (Logically, he started to link 2 legendary
Balinese traditions through a new modern
concept kesanggingan or painting and keudagian
or architecture. Both traditions are
characterised by the fact that their best
examples have always been created upon the basis
of systematic natural connections religious
concepts. In Bali, there is no distinction
between sacral the profane transitions are
smooth.
40Summary of the above works
- He is an artist who, continually for many years,
has been building up an artistic, cultural and
philosophical experience based on the observation
of elemental nature, of basic structures and
"architectural" forms of spatial order. - In his imaginary world the elemental, the
original, the core of all things are in the
centre "In order to be as close to truth as
possible one has to get to the bottom of things.
This is the only way I can ask the really
existential questions and transpose them with
artistic means into aesthetic models."
41Interpretations of the above works
- Uses color and form on canvas.
- Colours and various geometric forms, conveying
emotions and a deep sense of spirituality. - Influenced by Japanese brush painting and infused
his calligraphy works with signs and symbols
expressing his relationship to the forces of
nature - His intuitive reactions to the phenomena of the
world around him are reflected in diverse
installation works - During his early career, Wianta studied the
Balinese classical wayang style of painting from
master artists in Kamasan, Klungkung. His
drawings of Balinese spirits and creatures has
novel, peculiar and personalized shapes. When he
used colours, the works were similar in structure
to his drawings but did not have figurative
elements. Instead, he began painting in a kind of
abstraction that systematically used small dots
of colour with a mixture of linear contours and
flat surfaces. Then he went on to create
geometrical constructions that combined
spontaneous calligraphic strokes. His work is
represented in the collection of The Neka Museum
in Ubud Bali. He also does installations and
performance art to convey his concerns about
social and cultural change.
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43Assembling period 1990
- Series of rhythmic forms with vibrant colours
against monochrome backgrounds - Focused on contrasts between dimension space
- Deconstruction plays a major role
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50Calligraphy period 1987-1999
- Range from carefully controlled style to the
dynamic, ink-splattering style of great Zen
calligraphers - Analogous to music or nature
- Dances around his canvas moves in body in a
dynamic way - Represents icons of a higher universal culture
rather than icons of mass culture - Represents the depths of virtual space using
optical effects derived from combinations of
square, triangular, even circular shapes,
superimposed with layers of lines in colors of
differing gradation - Borrowed pre-existing material drawings,
writing, music, culturally meaningful signifiers,
all as references to form to be deconstructed and
remade into other, different forms. - Each work becomes a text open to interpretation,
an elemental sign or set of signs, becomes
itself. - It could be that there is an empty bubble devoid
of meaning within and this may well be the place
where we find a mere fragment of a reflection
that will itself visit our thoughts.
51Calligraphy period 1987-1999
- Some of his large calligraphic paintings are
reminiscent of the work of the American artist
Jackson Pollock, who created paintings by
dripping paint randomly on large canvasses laid
on the floor. - The difference is that while Pollock often
painted while drunk on alcohol and created
canvases full of beautiful randomness, Wianta
paints sober and his paintings are concentrated
studies.
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53http//ohousegallery.blogspot.com/2009_02_01_archi
ve.html
Rain Biography - 240 x 360 cm - Mixed Media -
2008
54http//ohousegallery.blogspot.com/2009_02_01_archi
ve.html
Civilization Warrior - 240 x 360 cm - Mixed Media
- 2008
55Mixed media period 1992-present
- Powerful images with strong contrasting colours
reveal his concern for social environmental
problems - Mixed media period 1995-1999 (Deconstruction of
the urban landscape ) - Coarse materials such as steel, copper, wire,
nails
56Installation 1995-present
- Glassroom, vairabel, objek video, 2008
- A mattress is a private space, but when we see
there are shards of broken glass there, we feel a
hot, angry, violent energy there, he said.
57Installation 1995-present
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ve.html
Glass Room - 100 x 200 x 35 cm - Mixed Media -
2008
58Space On Space, 2009 At the Gaya Fusion (an art
gallery in Bali)
- Art in the exhibition space is an unchanging
spectacle. It is the framing of a psychological
image. It is an event that turns the visual
elements in art works into actors arranged by
somebody who calls himself an artist. In truth he
is more a director than an artist. Wianta
considers staging of art works within a gallery
space as staging an event.
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59Space On Space, 2009 At the Gaya Fusion (an art
gallery in Bali)
- All of the Gaya Fusion wall space, measuring
approximately 1600X1200X450 cm is covered with
abstract op images. As many as 3000 images made
using acrylic on plywood measuring 35X45 cm are
attached to the walls. Wianta hopes to produce a
work that psychologically impact the audienceas
they enter a space thus filled with these images.
- Transforming exhibition space into a more
event-oriented space is clearly necessary these
days, if only because it reflects the popularity
of the spectacle this century, now that the age
of listening has been replaced with the age of
seeing - with all of its looking, watching,
observing, invigilating, peeping and glancing
that dominates daily life - (from Yasraf Amir Piliang, Multiplisitas dan
Diferensi Redefinisi Desain, Teknologi dan
Humanitas, Jalasutra, Yogyakarta, 2008, p. 261)
http//www.mbulle.com/editorial/made-vianta-gaya.a
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60Dream Island, 2003 Video projection and
installation In the video, sequences from news
reports about the bombings in Kuta are combined
with scenes from a slaughterhouse, in which the
artist pours blood over screens showing pictures
of the attack. These pictures hang on the walls
of another, darkened room. Visitors can only see
them with the help of the flashlights provided. A
kind of tomb has been built in the center.
61Installations 1995-present
- Thee-dimensional art has gained particular favor
in Indonesia where the wealth of traditional
symbolism makes possible all sorts of meaningful
encounters with objects. Wianta's installations
are not so much intellectual constructions as
immediate interventions-or responses, as he puts
it, to elements in his surroundings. They are the
three-dimensional equivalent of his "action
painting - Wianta 's installations are therefore simply
another kind of response" to the world of things
around him-and, as always, it is not the result
but the process that concerns him.
62Performance Art/Happenings
- Art and Peace on Padang Galak Beach in Sanur,
Bali - In December 10 1999, on the occasion of World
Peace Day, he organized a monumental Millennium
Performance. This massive performance was a
reaction to the violent movement that ousted
President Suharto in 1998. He integrated the
following into an artwork - 2000 young dancers dressed in white danced
against black sand (a choreographic answer to the
foaming waves of the sea) - 2 helicopters
- hundreds of assistants
- Seascape
- Sky
- A 2000m-long white banner with poems and messages
of peace written in various languages from all
over the world and with Wianta's own
calligraphies and characters painted in black
unfurled by the people in this work.
63Art and Peace
- The Art and Peace performance is not a reaction
against violence and oppression but a conscious
effort by an artist to create the conditions and
atmosphere for peace. - The performance is a kind of ritual offering to
the Balinese. - It combines literature, poetry, dance, painting
and technology and tackles one of the most
explosive themes of our era namely violence. - It builds on the wayang kulit, the traditional
shadow puppet theatre of Indonesia that has been
used since ancient times to criticise political
and social situations and in which the dalang or
puppet master as well as the clowns try to offer
solutions.
64Symbolism in Art and Peace
- Helicopter dance
- Also technologyAlso messenger of peace
- Also mythical symbolism of deities in Sea
- 2000 METRE LONG CLOTH peace/innocence/virginity
- Wind symbol of power
- Movements Nature
- To him, peace has so many connections with
teenage and life, fraught as it is with fighting,
narcotics, free sex and crime - A healthy, artistic and meaningful activity
65Street
- With the "Street", Wianta wanted to show us that
art can change a non-place into a stage suitable
for propagating an artistic message about the
state of consciousness in a changing society.
66Other Installations/Happenings
- His environmental awareness has materialized into
several art instaltations/happenings such as
"Forest and Life" in Apuan, Tabanan (1999) "Sound
and Nature" in Apuan, Tabanan (1997) "Water,
Fire, and Air" in Apuan, Tabanan and Gajah Wong
river, Yogyakarta, Central Java (1995). - His strong sense of social responsibility
prompted him to hold several exhibitions to
donate his paintings for sate in support of many
social causes. These include a fundraising
exhibition together with other artists at the
Bali Cliff Hotet to help poor regions of Bati
(1995) and the sale of several paintings to help
AIDS research in San Francisco and the earthquake
victims of Flores, Indonesia (1993). Since 1992,
through his "Wianta" Foundation, he has
collaborated with the Ford Foundation to help
preserve endangered traditional art and culture
in Bati. And, in 1991, he staged an "Art Camp" in
Apuan to bring together many Indonesian and
international scholars and contemporary artists. - http//www.madewianta.com/biography.php
67references
- http//www.scribd.com/doc/9557671/MADE-WIANTA-RETR
OSPECTIVE-EXHIBITION-1970-2000 - http//www.indo.com/featured_article/diversity.htm
l - http//www.baliadvisor.com/shop-bali-paintings.htm
l