Tuesday, August 31, 2010

Detail for Where Damage Isn't Already Done 2009










Where Damage Isn't Already Done 2009 , Experiment Photography.






Detail for End of Ens 2009

ART EXHIBITION NO APPEARANCE NON EXISTING
Invisible Project In Collaboration With Affiliated friends
Curated by Matthanee Nilavongse
Produces by Clare Donegan
At The Hole in t' Wall, Hebden Bridge, United Kingdom.

I looked at my life, I'd love to have some link of art between Bangkok, Thailand and Hebden Bridge, United Kingdom.Because even the racism is effect all around the world now but I still believed that art is having no boundary.And also I would like to present one shade of the Thai Culture to the local people where I lived because not many people know Thailand if they never been. Some stereotype about Thai people is quite strong. I couldn't change the ideal but I could show some aesthetic side.So from the little start I would like to have a first exhibition in Hebden Bridge, United Kingdom and then go to Berln, Germany which I have one connection with the independent gallery and then go to Bangkok and Chiangmai, Thailand and hopefully to expanding the group and continuing onto the next people.
By Matthanee Nilavongse

ATTENDED ARTISTS Sukhum Nakpradith , Matthanee Nillavongse , Saroengrong Wongsa - van , Dhanyapat Sajjalaksana , Narissara Pianwimungsa , Pittikasem Nilavongse , Promporn Pakkam , Alice Hutt , Clare Donegan , Clare Lupino , James Bell , Kate Borgman , SNUB23 , SINNA1


APPRAISAL
By Kelly Loughlin & Silmon Manfield, 2009


"No Appearance Non Existing presents work by an international collective of artists. The group includes a predominance of Thai artists living and working in the United Kingdom, USA and Thailand, alongside contributors from Britain and Ireland. The exhibition's leitmotiv has its foundation in Theravada Buddhist philosophy. The liberation from 'becoming' things or selves by the ridding of personal suffering, and was devised through an online exchange between Sukhum Nakpradith, director of the INVISIBLE PROJECT in Thailnad, curator Matthanee Gig Nilavongse in Hebden Bridge, West Yorkshire and the coterie of artists involved.

First show in Hebden Bridge in March 2009, the exhibition will tour to the Futuresonic Fringe arts festival in Manchester followed by shows in Berlin and Chiangmai.On display are a diversity of styles and media, including painting and photography, however, the most utilised techniques on offer are collage and montage. In many ways this is fitting, as the project avoids any straightforward dialogue between East and West, opening instead for the way shared fragments of personal cultural and spiritual experience find resonance in an increasingly globalised world.Among the pieces exhibited some common threads emerge. A dreamlike, hallucinatory quality is evident in many of the explorations of culture, myth, memory and presence. This is apparent in the constant blending of the iconic and the everyday. Figures from Greco/Romano and Biblical mythology (Pitikasem Nilavongse), Catholic liturgy (Clare Lupino) and Renaissance art (Mathanee Gig Nilavongse) appear as fragments of the mundane of alien intrusions.Pitikasem Nilavongse's paintings employ a warm and calming palette and, with the inclusion of renderings of ancient figures such as Michelangelo's sculpture of Moses in the composition, are delicate statements of an ethereal world.Clare Lupino's intensely personal pieces delineate memories of a past that has shaped her and has left its mark. Her Triptych 'Over the rainbow' explores this autobiographical theme in fine detail, describing a journey of self-discovery and the recuperation of relationships with family, self and God. The painting/montage has been executed with energy, radiating golden brush-strokes enliven the composition, while splayed hands in fervent celebration fill canvases with joy and devotion.Matthanee Gig Nilavongse's photographic self-portraits display humour, exoticism, eroticism and aplayful dalliance with the history of art and culture. In one she has been transmogrified into the ubiquitous carved Thai wooden statue that greats you as you ender her pictorial world. The appearance of Antonio Canova's 'Three Graces' in another lends a demure counter to the baroque ostentation of the interior scene, while the artist stands before a set table bearing ad enigmatic smile resembling da Vinci's 'La Giaconda'Titles such as 'Over the rainbow' and 'Once upon a time' suggest the mythic element of popular cultural traditions and mass media products. The sense of movement or voyage implicit in these titles echoes the idea of a personal, spiritual or political journey evoked in work by Dhanyapat Sajjalaksana, Sukhum Nakpradith, Clare Donegan and Alice Hutt.Our interpretation, as westerners of some of the Thai artist's work is not straightforward. We view them not fully understanding their spiritual significance. The works of Sukhum Nakpradith, Dhanyapat Sajjalaksana and Narissara Pianwimungsa are emblematic of their beliefs, exploring the meanings of a Buddhist vocabulary self, truth and emptiness, but the most importantly the voyage to attain knowledge Sukhum Nakpradith's photographic installation entitled 'End of Ens' obscures our perception of reality. Six images are hung closely together and each is a journey, or at least part of one. Viewing them is like watching the landscape pass from the window of a speeing train, until your eyes fix on the last image, where we go passing in to and empty night.in Dhanyapat Sajjalaksana's tentraptych the vista is celestial. The spectator hovers above a geometric landscape, among naturalistic imaginings: a pair of unearthly wings, coulds, a bird perched on a branch of a blossoming tree and whathas the sense of a cityscape at its most frenetic.With titles such as '. . . seems like you are not realizing it'. the tour paintings forcast stages of the perpetual odyssey to enlightenment.The inverted head of the figure in Narissara Pianwimungsa's solitary painting has an innocent face: its blue eyes stare, not into your eyes but just above your head. The figure is engulfed in a puffer jaket and sinks into an overall red-hued glow, depicting a mood of self-doubt and leaving us questioning who we are.Depictions of the individual reverberate between being present and not present, connected but isolated. This dilemma is explored in relation to urban space (Promporn Pakkam, Saroengrong Wong Savan, Kate Borgman) or reconfigurations of the natural and the machine (James Bell). Clothing, tatoos and elements of tradition become a repertoire able to disguese yet simultaneously.reveal, distort yet affirm (Clare Lupino in collaboration with textile artist Nikki Rose, Matthanee Gig Nilavongse, Pittikasem Nilavongse) As a whole the exhibition is quirky and thoughtful by turns. It challenges our preconceptions of what we find acceptable by ignoring the conversations of a traditionally presented show. It has a guerrilla/punk mentality; it is rough-and-ready and has a no-frills concept of display, yet the construction and ideals of the individual works do not comply with the ethos. Their conceptual identities are not so straightforward of unadorned. The exhibition title itself, No Appearance Non Existing. is thought provoking and leaves you asking questions. It is perhaps the many visual contradictions implicit in the collection of work here and the cathartic response inherent in realizing a piece of visual art that enables the artist/voyager to begin to understand the true nature of reality, helping to unburden the self. It is this realization that connects so precisely with the show's original template."

Kelly Loughlin is a writer and academic based in Hebden Bridge, West Yorkshire.Silmon Manfield is an illustrator based in Hebden Bridhe, Wel Yorkshire. He has recently completed Memoria Historica, his first major series of drawings. Memoria Historica depicts the progress of an excavation of a Spanish Civil War era communal grave in the north of Spain and, as a collection, has been exhibited internationally. He is currently working on an artist's book illustrating a poem by Orcadian writer George Mackay Brown, entitled Orcadians: Seven Impromptus.

Detail for End of Ens 2009 , Installation View , Dimensions Variable.


Monday, August 30, 2010

Detail for End of Ens 2009 , Colour Photography Digital print on Fine Art paper , 6 pieces,






That Look You Give That Guy 2009 , Experiment Photography , Digital Photography




That Look You Give That Guy 2009

DRAWING EXHIBITION LOVE'S LABOUR'S LOST
Organized by Invisible Project, 23 Bar Art space, Bangkok, Thailand.

LOVE'S LABOUR'S LOST COVER MUSIC FROM DE PHAZZ
There's shakespeare on the phone again.mentions his days with juliet complains about his fellow romeo and all the trouble that he had so, william, here we are again it's time to clear the scene remember when you failed the other day when you tried to tame katharine love's labour's lost with fancy poems on filthy paper roses stolen in a park cheap potions of romantic vapour you wouldn't even catch a lark there's shakespeare on the phone again. under his leading lady's spell it's me who has to tell you this he can not write it down so well.

For many times, many things occurred in order to find the answer of some question, caused by sentimental feeling that hard to be understood.So we try to find these answers from doing something like reflecting our own feeling or imagination by drawing them through both concrete and abstract sources in mind, using common tools and simple clues around us.When our feeling is transported within drawing, it will perfectly help us to memorize things and healing some wounded emotion.http://invisibleproject.blogspot.com/ ATTENDED ARTISTS : Alongkorn Sriprasert , Sukhum Nakpradith , Jitti Jumnianwai , Thanapon Sertsanit , Cherdpong Sikkajaroen , Noppaklao Srimatkul , Pharawi Phuphet , Thapakorn Katumchalee , Seiki Ozeki , Tomoko Matsui , Yosuke Sano

That Look You Give That Guy 2009 , Installation View , Dimensions Variable

Detail forThat Look You Give That Guy 2009






Saturday, August 28, 2010

INVISIBLE PROJECT [ VISIBLE IN SITUATION ] Start 2008

INVISIBLE PROJECT is the project of art activity, expressing mainly through art exhibitions, Originated by the association of 8 artists with individual basic aspect, experience and lifestyle, leading to the many different ways to create art works in concept, inspiration, and type of finished work. These diversities are not the scattering pieces of thought but the significant jigsaws that when put together unfolding the stories and social vision. This project encourages artists to present and exchange point of view with one another during the creating process. When all the art works are exhibited and publicized, they offer a chance for all people to participate in, analyzing, criticizing and suggesting useful solutions for society. This process of connection and communication will enable the participants both artists and general people to create new experience altogether. It will form concepts and primary materials which enhance the development of individual work methods and point of view.http://invisibleproject.blogspot.com/

In Other Words 2008 , Experiment Photography , Digital Colour Photography


Sometimes 2008 , Experiment Photography , Digital Colour Photography






Difference But The Same ( Scene Landscape ) Sketch Project 2007.



Friday, August 27, 2010

Sketch Project 2006 , Photography Installation



GRAFIKA TAJLANDZKA 2006 , Printsmaking Exhibition , Gliwicach Library, Gliwicach, Poland.

GRAFIKA TAJLANDZKA Na wystawie znajdują się prace artystów z Tajlandii. Ekspozycję wypożyczono ze zbiorów Miejskiej Biblioteki Publicznej w Gliwicach. Autorzy: l. Siriluk Yinovorrakansuk 2. Sukhum Nakpradid 3. Ratchapan Sariman 4. Jutamas Janyasiri 5. Supasit Korpadun 6. Boonlau Piyachat 7. Ponasiri Mr.Riddee 8. Chaivut Ruamrudeekool 9. Misut Yimparsert lO. Kwanchuni Puniop ll. Suwanklang Chirawan 12. Suban Chatchai 13. Punyorak Piyanoch 14. Plubplon Olarn 15. Pondis Sakon 16. Boonkom Sureewan 17. Suwanmanee Pongsak i in. "Grafika tajlandzka", 05-25.08.2006 , Biblioteka Główna - Galeria "Pod Sową"ul.Wielkopolska 1a .Prace studentów Faculty of Fine Arts, Chiangmai University w Tajlandii - 25 autorów, 58 prac , http://www.jasnet.pl/ciasna/TAJ/INDEX.HTM

GRAFIKA TAJLANDZKA 2006 , Printsmaking Exhibition , Gliwicach Library, Gliwicach, Poland.