Master of Arts in Curatorial Practice
By Jmm.studio

“In Denial: A Reality Check” co-curated by our 6 students

MA Curatorial Practice, Faculty of Fine and Applied Arts, Chulalongkorn University invites you all to “In Denial: A Reality Check Art Exhibition” curated by our MA students. .

MA Curatorial Practice, Faculty of Fine and Applied Arts, Chulalongkorn University invites you all to “In Denial: A Reality Check Art Exhibition” curated by our MA students. . 💙 Art For Air X Art4C 🗺️ In Denial: A Reality Check Art Exhibition 🗓️ Date&Time: Monday – Saturday from May 13 to July 12, 2023 (10.00-18.00 hrs.) 📌 Venue: Art4C, Gallery and Creative Learning Space (Bitescape, 1st Floor) https://goo.gl/maps/pKhohJEpdUyEkTpL6 . .

In Denial: A Reality Check, is an exhibition that mirrors societal truth on air pollution and our constant brush off with it. Evidently, we cannot survive without air. Yet, how are we so complacent with air toxicity? This exhibition invites us to confront reality and visualize the dystopian future through a range of artworks. Highlighting the causes, consequences, and even the futuristic possibilities through this passage, we hope to entail you on a journey of awareness. .

Through this thematic exhibition that resonates with Art for Air, a collaborative network of artists started in Chiang Mai, our seven multidisciplinary artists have been juxtaposed together to amplify this cause. This unfolding of the story begins with the “ongoing” state of our surroundings shown through visual arts and opens into this vast possibility of “becoming” with paintings and sculpture. This multi-faceted display will offer a glimpse into the harsh reality of air pollution intending to not shock or sensationalize the audience but rather divulge the perception that it is “our ” collective story. . Suphavinee Srisopon combines her architectural model-making method in mixed media work called Fading as an invitation of the journey of awareness. The two different mediums represent the different layers of air and land in which will slowly be taken over due to mankind’s habit of polluting. . Wasinburee Supanichvoraparch, a Thai “pottergrapher”, is a well-known ceramist sculpture artist and photographer. His trio set of photographs glaze the walls depicting the current condition of the pollution from urbanisation. Through his lens, he captures and reflects with clarity the state of our environment that we are living in. .

Kawita Vatanajyankur, is a Thai world-renowned media and performance artist. In the displayed video, titled My Mother and I (Vacuum III), she painstakingly transforms her body into a vacuum cleaner, representing the lungs inhaling polluted air. Her choice to use her body as a medium is not just impactful but also deeply empathizing, it brings the audience to feel her concern for high toxicity. Her body of work is a testament to the power of art to challenge, provoke, and inspire. .

The public program, “Are You Satisfied?” is a microcosm of the current world. We invite the audience to participate in creating AI generated paintings. When AI completes our “obligation,” it also affirms us in the public space, the so-called “lifestyle.” We are placed in a fantasy world, blinding us not to think and explore the consequences of our damages. . Besides AI program, In Denial: A Reality Check team create an exhibition exclusive AR filter via Meta Sparks Studio and name is ‘Mask a mickle’ is originated from the Scottish phrase “mony a mickle maks a muckle” which means many little things, make a big thing. By using Instagram filters to address air pollution, we can leverage the power of art and technology to raise awareness, promote action, and inspire a little change boundlessly around the world. . Through this centrally located video installation, “An Elegy for Ecology”, Indian artist Sharbendu De depicts a transition into futuristic speculation. Our hyper-capitalist lifestyle and myopic self-centrism has made the sixth extinction a plot waiting to be played out. He questions our awareness in this Anthropocene epoch. His flossy depiction of a desperate future where even the bare basic need of oxygen becomes commodified plays out ironically. .

Meanwhile, Italian artist Stefano Galli uses oil paintings to investigate the world around him. He mixes interventions from the digital world with traditional paintings to create a fantasy world, non-existent in our polluted future. His unique style and constant exploration during the creative process render a thought-provoking visual feast with a sense of humor. .

Yiwen Zhu uses the cyanotype and mixed media to point out the seriousness of air pollution as the title Choking, Breathing, Choking goes. The work depicts how strong and smelly toxic air travels all the way from our mouth, nose, respiratory tract to lung and one day, even masks can no longer protect us and how we suffocate. .

Thai Social activist artist WISHULADA tries to encapsulate the futuristic reality with “The Last Bear”. Through this upcycled conceptual installation, she tries to address air pollution emissions and global warming by simultaneously promoting creative thinking to clean, sort, and recycle materials. .

Air pollution is a predicament, it is happening around us, to us. Statistically in March 2023, nearly 1.3 million people were adversely affected by the haze, of which 200,000 were hospitalized in a single week.

Calamities such as global warming, glacial ice melting, and air pollution are indicators that we are deranged for being IN-DENIAL of its seriousness. .

For more information: Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/MACuratorialPracticeChula Email: curatorialpractice@chula.ac.th . Let’s awaken. NOW. #ArtForAir #ArtForAir2023 #Art4C #Gallery #Exhibition #Bangkok #Thailand

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