These young artists revolt against the political crisis with their own bodies
M Dwi Marianto
Young Indonesian artists have started using
nudity in new and quite personal ways. One artist showed a video of he
and his wife making love to climax on a wet canvas. Just as some
segments of society are being drawn into more normative religion, and
in the midst of a Javanese society that disapproves of frank personal
expression, these artists are brazenly creating a space to make very
private statements. This could be their personal revolt against a
necrophilic mass media culture that revels in violence, chaos and
death. Like so many Indonesians, they want to know what use it is to
listen to the big ideas of an intellectual elite that seems so
righteous yet is so powerless against the intrigues of that very same
elite.
In June I visited the home of Laksmi
Shitaresmi (born in Yogyakarta in 1974). She had just given birth to a
baby girl. Her husband is also a painter. In their tiny living room I
was shocked to see two large nude paintings of Laksmi. The breasts and
pubic hair were quite naturalistic. I had seen the paintings before,
but what shocked me was where she had hung them, precisely where every
visitor could see. Amidst a society growing more puritan, Laksmi didn't
care if anyone thought this was impolite. As I sat there snacking in
her living room, my eyes were exactly on a level with her genitals.
This was significant! Laksmi seemed to want to speak directly, without
being bound by traditional norms that in practice stop people from
saying anything personal or critical.
Erica (born in Yogyakarta in 1971) is a
dropout from the Indonesian Institute of Art in Yogyakarta, and one of
the few female painters making a living from her work. At present she
is doing a 'bathing' series. Up till now she has been painting playful,
nascenes from in and around her home, and she has become quite successful. But in 1999 she began to be more personal. Bathing in my favourite villa
is a self-portrait in the bath. Only the pubic area is discreetly
scattered with soap bubbles (see cover). She wants to depict bathing as
a relaxing and refreshing activity, but also one in which she can shed
her restrictive 'cultural' clothing, at least on canvas. That is
something many Indonesians long for at a time when so many crises give
them a headache.
Made love
Arahmaiani (born in Bandung in 1961) is
different again. This artist, who once studied at the Bandung Institute
of Technology, has long made critical statements through her art. She
has occasionally made use of clearly depicted genitalia, which in her
work symbolise domination and militarism in an Indonesian context. As
one of the few critical Indonesian women artists her work might appear
more radical because there is so little comparison. At a performance in
the French Cultural Centre in Bandung in 1999 she took off her shirt
(leaving a bra) and invited the audience to take a marker pen and draw
or write anything they liked on her skin. This is the first time a
Sundanese woman has done this. When Sundanese greet one another they
only touch with the tip of their finger. Men and women do not touch at
all - they just tip their hand to their own breast when they meet.
I thought Arahmaiani had been the most
radical ever in terms of using the body as an artistic medium, until
Nurkholis came to my home to show me a video. This artist, born in
Jepara in 1969, is well known for his religiosity, and remains so to
the present day. He hates pretence and has always acted just as he has
spoken. His work could be called surrealist. The body painting on his
VCD was truly radical. The first part showed him painting the canvas
with his own naked body. That is already unusual for Indonesia, but it
was nothing compared to the next part, which involved his wife. They
made love, and let their natural movements imprint themselves on the
wet canvas. He showed this VCD at the opening of an exhibition in the
Dirix Gallery on 1 July 2000. The audience was stunned. Some reacted
cynically, others looked embarrassed, while others again congratulated
Nurkholis.
The technique came to him after a period of
dryness, when conventional painting with the brush no longer satisfied.
In frustration he kicked the wet canvas and it left an impression of
his foot. He then developed this idea until his entire body was
painting on a canvas already covered in wet paint. A simple idea, but
it had a big impact especially among younger artists and collectors in
Yogyakarta and beyond. I think Nurkholis' search for a new language to
express himself is shared by many Indonesians, who are no longer
satisfied with the 'true and correct Indonesian' (bahasa Indonesia yang
baik dan benar) they were taught at school to understand their national
crisis.
These four artists are looking for an
answer to a personal problem, but their discoveries represent an open
visual text and a symbolism with much wider relevance. They are working
in the midst of a multi-dimensional crisis that directly or indirectly
affects their personal lives. They speak visually in a language whose
vocabulary is drawn from the body - a very private language.
When I still lived in Rawasari Kampung in
Jakarta I often overheard the neighbourhood women bicker. A few times
one of them would turn around, bend over and in her fury lift her
skirts and say: 'Your face is just like my arse!' Maybe these four
artists are like many other people who find themselves simply confused
by all the very true but also very remote political analysis in the
media. To all that big talk they want to say: 'Why don't you just shut
up and learn to control your inner self first'.
M Dwi Marianto (isiyogya@yogya.wasantara.net.id) is a well-known art critic. He teaches at the Indonesian Institute of Art in Yogyakarta.
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