Haegue Yang a leading artist of her generation kicks off the first series of PlatformSTPI Projects (PSP) with
Honesty Printed on Modesty - an exhibition of close to 100 new selected works utilizing the colors and textures of spices and vegetables with print and paper works, produced in collaboration with STPI’s workshop. A new artistic trajectory for Yang and STPI, these works draw attention to the power of spices and everyday food items from its domestic function to its impact on civilizations.
Yang’s surprise discovery and usage of spices and vegetables found in markets of Singapore sourced from around the world, chart the earliest drivers of globalization where the quest for spices established a vast economic network throughout human history. Followed by revolutionary, modern methods of how food is harvested, processed and distributed to meet immense, consumption demands today.
Yang experiments with new materials by integrating the physical and sensorial characteristics of spices and vegetables with handmade paper, exemplifying Rabindranath Tagore’s notion of domesticity, where the less representational and ordinary is significant and necessary for life (otherwise known as the ‘passive quality’ of women). These humble works bring viewers closer to the sensorial, tactile experiences with basic food items, tracing the origins and development of trade in South East Asia, particularly Singapore’s progress from a colonial hub to a modern, global city.
STPI Director Emi Eu comments, “Haegue Yang is an exciting artist to watch against the backdrop of globalization, where her works provoke and encourage greater self awareness of changing identities, values and beliefs.”
Born 1971 in South Korea, the Berlin and Seoul based artist is known for her ability to transform industrially manufactured and often insipid items into abstract compositions that deliberately alters perceptions through fresh and sometimes destabilizing sensory experiences. Her practice of challenging the classic Aristotelian view of perception where ‘each of the five senses has a distinct and proper sphere of activity’ reflects her literary and philosophical interests.
Press release courtesy STPI - Creative Workshop & Gallery.