Gatot Pujiarto: Stitching Stories, 15 Jan 2016 — 07 Mar 2016
Exhibitions

Gatot Pujiarto: Stitching Stories

Pearl Lam Galleries presents Stitching Stories, the first solo exhibition of Indonesian artist Gatot Pujiarto in Hong Kong. The exhibition showcases 10 of Pujiarto’s works, exploring abnormalities, weirdness and tragedy with inspiration from uncommon events or occurrences in everyday life. Born in Malang, East Java, Indonesia, Pujiarto graduated from The Faculty of Fine Art and Design IKIP Malang. He trained as a painter but his practice has since developed into collage, using paint, paper, thread and textile. Pujiarto’s works are narrative and figurative. Metaphor is often used in order to communicate a story, criticism, or observation of society or moral issues. Pujiarto “stitches” his stories together, taking elements from his everyday experiences and surrounding occurrences. These stories, preserved in the artist’s memory, remain there until they ‘tickle’ his fancy. Pujiarto then takes them and embeds them into his works through the perspective, techniques, and language of expression that he normally uses. Sometimes the stories are trivial and common; more often they are abnormal and unusual, and they are often overlooked. Pujiarto believes that these stories need to be highlighted and retold. When the stories are stitched, bundled and combined, the audience responds emotionally to the work. As early as 2008, Pujiarto started using fabric/textiles in his works to tell his stories. Stitching the fabrics onto the works becomes his way of “stitching” his stories. The fabrics are patched on, cut, pasted on, braided or torn. They are used to create forms with stitches, provide highlight, or act as outlines of forms. After his residency in Bandung in 2011, the artist started producing his tapestry works. Pujiarto’s works often depict the irrationality of human behaviour. In one of the featured works, Spooky, Pujiarto tries to visualise the superstition of volcanic eruptions in Javanese culture. The work was created during the eruption of the Kelud Mountain in East Java where people often link mountain eruptions with mystical happenings. Interpreting volcanic eruptions as signs of anger from devils, people provide offerings to prevent hauntings and curses. Textile and thread are the dominant medium in this work, mimicking the drawing of lines and the contours of man. Another exhibition highlight is Air and Water Pollution, which Pujiarto created to express his feelings towards the degradation of the environment. Textile and thread are densely packed on canvas, creating a cluster of mountain-like and root-like features. As a result of human activities, the degradation of the environment has been intensifying in recent decades, while the artist feels that little effort has been made to improve or fix the situation. This is a significant yet overlooked phenomenon from which the artist has drawn inspiration.

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