Nyein Chan Su (often called NCS) was born in 1973 in Rangoon and studied at the State School of Fine Arts from 1994.
Read MoreNCS's narratives and images require the viewer to enter them as an active reader; on one level, it is the visual narrative of people, time and place, on another level, it calls to mind that very little has changed. His works invoke the futility that, despite 'change', Myanmar's society continues to be plagued by red tape, which NCS so subtly describes as a thin red vein that delicately meanders through his pictures. He says: 'Changes are only on the surface, in other words – there is no change, no improvement, no feeling of security in our minds, souls and emotions. In reality there still is no equality, justice. We continue to be plagued by "red tape" bureaucracy as we survive on faint hopes for a brighter future.'
He has participated in several shows inside Myanmar as well as in Japan (1999), Hong Kong (1999) Singapore (2000, 2001, 2002), Hong Kong (2004) and Thailand (2008, 2009). His participation in the 1999 Fukuoka Art Triennale in Japan launched his international art career. He is equally renowned as a painter as well as a performance artist and for his video installations. A founding member of Yangon’s Studio Square Art Gallery, Nyein Chan Su is widely regarded as one of Myanmar’s most promising mid career artists. In 2001, he received a Certificate of Recognition from the ASEAN Art Awards and in 2004 he was the second prize winner of the Myanmar Contemporary Art Awards. Nyein Chan Su’s artworks are in the permanent collections of the Singapore Art Museum, and the Fukuoka Art Museum.