PENYATAAN KARYA
Title : Clock in / Clock out
Size : 1000cm x 145cm
Material : Acrylic on canvas
Year : 2020-2021
Location : White Room Gallery,
New Era University College (Kajang)
I am an artist with dual background, Fine Arts and Interior Architecture.
“Carpenter Ink Markers” is the source of inspiration for my art creation.
Clock in / Clock out is an artwork to record the special pandemic period. We used to Clock in / Clock out for work. But, in the sudden pandemic forces everyone to pause everything and start paying attention to our own selves.
My artwork requires full concentration. I have to adjust my breath, to make my hands, my body, my feet “merge” together to focus and to complete a “straight line”. This reflect the opposite situation of our life now. We are in a digital age, that is full of information. We are train to be multitask all the time. However, my artwork is fully focus on one thing which is to create “a straight line”.
Every single line painted on the canvas is a way to record time. It is like a loom, the sewing machine. In my artwork is a sewing “time” machine. We can feel the flow of the time and the memory of the color weaving. The color chosen on the canvas came from my observation. They are food, they are cloth, daily life, they are multicultural of Malaysia.
This artwork now is quietly stay in a space that represent the image of everyone “working from home” in this special period.
KARYA AKHIR
Yap Chee Keng convey his thoughts, emotions and view of art via lines. As a creator with backgrounds in both architecture and art, he uses impressions of chalk lines by placing layers of lines with the layout of threads to build colourful impressions, and to convey multiple emotional senses, such as tactful softness, toughness, honesty, steadiness, light buoyancy, smooth flow and various visible and invisible qualities.
The artist abandoned the traditional paintbrush, and instead, has chosen other tools as a way to represent his thread of thought, and this unconventionality is often a point to focus on whilst viewing his artworks. Yap uses “carpenter ink markers” on the canvas instead of paintbrushes, creating a deep image of “overlapping lines”. These series of lines are placed in a limited area, overlapping peacefully and rigorously with various kinds of crosses.
This skill of thorough thought in how to lay the lines is rather fascinating. It began from Yap’s mixing of original colours with the pink colour of the“carpenter ink markers”; these are found all over the canvas, including along its four sides. His colourful imagery is formed by lines, thus, with images spreading through the whole artwork, the entire piece appears to be united and yet overwhelmed by the lines.
Undoubtedly, the strong visual sensation was led by an atmosphere of drawing to create a sensation of walking in a maze for the viewer. Yap created “Overlapping Lines” to discuss the abstract nature of lines themselves. It retains a tension of uncertainty, as well as allowing the painting to display charm of its own accord. Yap’s creations are like the mental outcomes following meditation, focusing on the expression of the practice and the track of self-idealism.
The creator cares about the circulation of life via the flow of time; he uses lines as a medium to convey the process of time on repeated labouring, and his work forms as an image with balanced lines. He also uses traditional “carpenter ink markers” in modern painting. Vertical lines represent time, space, and colourful dreams. Yap repeatedly overlapped coloured lines on his canvas, and these “carpenter ink markers” connected his teenage memories and the existence of his physicality, thus, developing a unique visual perception, leading us into the beauty of a kaleidoscope world.
Live
-
0% 5 / 5
Live
-
0% 3 / 3