Past Solo Exhibition

Heman Chong: Peace Prosperity And Friendship With All Nations 20.02.2021 — 18.04.2021

Information

Event has ended

20 February – 18 April 2021

About The Exhibition

STPI Gallery is pleased to announce Peace Prosperity And Friendship With All Nations, Heman Chong’s first solo exhibition at the gallery.

From the Brexit coin, the backdoors of embassies, the spy novel, and the Straits Times to the QR codes of Singapore’s COVID-19 SafeEntry system, the artworks in the exhibition bring together a constellation of conceptual gestures based upon everyday encounters and autobiographical objects that chronicle the complex political and cultural landscape of our present moment.

In 2020, the United Kingdom government released the Brexit fifty-pence coin to commemorate the UK leaving the European Union on 31 January 2020. To Chong, Brexit not only marks a global turn to ultranationalism but also a real end to the British Empire as the nation turned away from the multilateral internationalism that the European Union represented.

The title of the exhibition, which is both the text on the Brexit coin and an artwork in the exhibition, points to the commemorative coin as a byproduct of a significant historical turn in the capitalist world system. A method of de-colonialising systems of power, this deadpan gesture of pointing to an everyday object that is a vehicle and representation of global power defines the artworks in this exhibition.

Call for the Dead (2020), a monumental new work produced in residency at STPI represents the labour and agency inherent in the act of redaction. Expanded across an entire room with 83 silkscreen prints on linen, the work represents Chong’s redaction of John le Carré’s first spy novel Call for the Dead (2020). The novel was published in 1961 when le Carré was a spy for British Intelligence.

Chong’s blots of ink across the pages of the novel remove all but the verbs of the story, writing out the secrets that le Carré could have leaked out in his fiction. For an artist in Singapore, a former regional headquarters for MI6, to redact a text about British Cold War espionage is an act of redaction as much as it is an act of postcolonial reclamation.

Accelerating Brexit’s historical trajectory of de-globalisation, COVID-19 has called into question the primacy of a West-centered world system. The Circuit Breaker Paintings (2020), a series of 56 paintings, is as much art as it is an artefact of our times. History collects as layers upon the objects that Chong makes. The series of paintings mark every day of the 2020 Singapore circuit breaker (7 April 2020 – 1 June 2020).

The paintings, which collectively are a retrospective of Chong’s painting practice dating back to 2009, are deliberately painted over with an ‘X’ that recalls the social-distancing measures cordoning off Singapore’s public spaces. The ‘X’s mark both the circuit breaker as a hard stop in the daily flows of life and capital, and the reach of the state onto the surface of the painting.

Chong’s latest works made in light of COVID-19 do not declare a world gone array, rather they resound with the quiet anxiety of a world turning slightly off-kilter. In Safe Entry (Version 2.0-2.7) (2020), an iteration of a public artwork made for the Singapore Art Museum, the QR Code – a small incidental phone-mediated encounter of everyday life – is enlarged to life-sized proportions.

The QR code, instead of giving you access to the national registration system, gives you access to a recorded walk of Terminal 2 Changi Airport posted on Chong’s YouTube channel Ambient Walking. The video was filmed before it closed for renovations during the circuit breaker. It functioned as a social coping tool that provided entertainment and access to a public space during a partial lock-down. A disabled man wrote Chong that his videos finally allowed him to walk freely around Singapore. Yet, the video of the airport terminal was also a disquieting suggestion of impending economic doom as flows of capital facilitated by in traveling human bodies reduced to a trickle.

Foreign Affairs is a series of photographs of embassy backdoors, which Chong repeats to form a pattern that he applies to the surface of the canvas, making ‘paintings’ and ‘curtains’. In picturing the backdoor, Chong makes apparent the everyday manifestation of the immaterial yet exceptionally powerful acknowledgement of state legitimacy. Presented in this exhibition as a monumental and overpowering curtain, Foreign Affairs #106 denotes a physical threshold that regulates what we see and how we navigate the gallery.

Chong’s deadpan conceptualism in Peace Prosperity And Friendship With All Nations leaves one unsure if they should laugh or cry. In Chong’s work, it is the simple accumulated labour of the task – from the “X”ing out of a painting to the deliberate monotonous grind of redacting an entire novel to the repetition of an image – that marks time, charts capital flows, and registers the totality of systems of governance.

In the face of such expansive and everyday systems, the artworks, like the exhibition title, are ironic – at first funny and absurd and later bureaucratically insidious and unnerving. They are like bad jokes falling flat as reality sinks in.

– Kathleen Ditzig, exhibition curator

About the artist

Heman Chong

Heman Chong

Residencies in 2006, 2020, 2023

Heman Chong (b. 1977, Muar, Malaysia, based in Singapore) is an artist, curator and writer whose practice investigates everyday behaviours and infrastructure to reveal how social constructs and power structures are woven into daily life. Further informed by an interest in how individuals and communities might imagine the future, he frequently employs science fiction as a metaphorical device and narrative approach.

Chong works across images, performances, situations and texts, in manners that shift between solemn and intimate, deliberate and accidental. Monument to the people we have conveniently forgotten (I hate you) (2008) is a site-specific installation comprising one million blacked out business cards strewn across the exhibition floor. Referencing the customary gesture of exchanging personal details in business relations, it acts loosely as a memorial for forgotten individuals while highlighting fleeting social connections. In Foreign Affairs (2018), Chong captures photographs of unassuming embassy backdoors—the spatial and symbolic threshold where discrete entries, or ‘slippages’, occur. Systematically repeated, the images resemble surveillance footage, leading the viewer to study the activity around the doors.

The artist obtained his Diploma in Visual Communications from Temasek Polytechnic, Singapore in 1997, and his MA in Communication Art and Design from the Royal College of Art, London in 2002. His work is held in numerous collections including Art Sonje Center, Seoul; Kadist Art Foundation, Paris; M+, Hong Kong; The National Museum of Art, Osaka; NUS Museum, Singapore; Rockbund Art Museum, Shanghai; Singapore Art Museum; and Weserburg Museum of Modern Art, Bremen.

Notable solo exhibitions include The Endless Summer (2024), UCCA Dune, Beidaihe; Writing While Walking And Other Stories (2020), Singapore Art Museum, Singapore; The Library of Unread Books (2019), Jameel Art Centre, Dubai; fictionfictionfiction (2019), Museum of Modern Art, Bremen; Spirits in the Material World (2019), Nieuwe Instituut, Rotterdam; The Library of Unread Books (2018), Kunstverein, Milan; Legal Books (Shanghai) (2018), Swiss Institute, New York; The Library of Unread Books (2017), Museum of Contemporary Art and Design, Manila; If, Ands, or Buts (2016), Rockbund Art Museum, Shanghai; and Never, A Dull Moment (2015), Art Sonje Center, Seoul. The artist has also participated in major international festivals including APT7 (2017), 7th Asia Pacific Triennial, Brisbane; For an Image, Faster Than Light (2016), 1st Yinchuan Biennale; The future is already here—it’s just not evenly distributed (2016), 20th Biennale of Sydney; Burning Down the House (2014), 10th Gwangju Biennale; Imagine Being Here Now (2011), 6th Momentum Nordic Biennial, Moss; In Dialogue with Northern Africa (2010), Manifesta 8, Murcia; Wonder (2008), 2nd Singapore Biennale; Chasm (2004), 2nd Busan Biennale; and Dreams and Conflicts (2003), 50th Venice Biennale.

Chong has had three residencies at the STPI Workshop in 2006, 2020 and 2023, with the latter two culminating in the exhibitions Peace Prosperity And Friendship With All Nations (2021), curated by Kathleen Ditzig, and Meditations on Shadow Libraries (2024), curated by Brian Kuan Wood.

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