Exhibition Opening | OMNILOGUE: Your Voice Is Mine
Date: 19 January 2013, Saturday
Time: 2pm onwards
Venue: NUS Museum
Free Admission.
To RSVP, please email museum@nus.edu.sg or call 6516 8817 by 16 Jan 2013
Guest-of-Honour
Prof. Chua Beng Huat
Provost Professor and Head of Department of Sociology, NUS
Programme
2.00pm: Artist Talks
3.45pm: Arrival of Guests for Exhibition Opening
4.00pm: Arrival of Guest-of-Honour
4.15pm: Speeches
5.00pm: Reception
Time: 2pm onwards
Venue: NUS Museum
Free Admission.
To RSVP, please email museum@nus.edu.sg or call 6516 8817 by 16 Jan 2013
Guest-of-Honour
Prof. Chua Beng Huat
Provost Professor and Head of Department of Sociology, NUS
Programme
2.00pm: Artist Talks
3.45pm: Arrival of Guests for Exhibition Opening
4.00pm: Arrival of Guest-of-Honour
4.15pm: Speeches
5.00pm: Reception
Exhibition Period: 19 January - 21 April 2013
Venue: Lee Kong Chian Gallery, NUS Museum
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As a form of cultural production that communicates gestures and values, Your Voice Is Mine is propositioned as an exhibitionary agent for raising dialogue, exploring narratives and channeling alternate positions. Lodged between artist, curator and locale of the Museum, it may be experienced as an attempt at examining these processes within the premise of ‘transcultural collaboration’ – a concept that is experiencing renewed impetus in contemporary art circles since the 1990s. Here, communication rests at the heart of things, where the very act of transmission may be considered something that contributes to the positioning and controlling of the audience in a given space, at times ephemerally highlighting the difficulty and collusion of translation, at other times understood as a literal attempt at realizing context(s) external to the Museum. Critically examining the very premise of collaboration, Your Voice is Mine teases its audiences into considering the myriad dynamics of consensus and contestation that take place within transcultural encounters - asking if one can indeed open up newer readings into the categorical ways of defining Other and Self? It begs its audiences to consider how art and exhibition-making reveal hidden inflections, when do these processes become more important than the final production of art, and how do they in turn relate to the spaces and cultures in which they take place?
Credits
Your Voice is Mine features works by artists Makiko Koie, Fuyuki Yamakawa, Shun Sasa, Takayuki Yamamoto, SHIMURAbros (Yuka and Kentaro) and Motohiro Tomii, created through their encounter and research on Singapore’s social and cultural histories. It is presented at the Lee Kong Chian Gallery of the NUS Museum, a space that features the Chinese Art Collection from the Lee Kong Chian Museum, supplemented by ceramics from the South and Southeast Asian Collection and the archaeological collection of Dr. John Miksic.
It is the final installation of the OMNILOGUE series of exhibitions that began in 2010 and is part of The Japan Foundation’s initiative to foster curatorial exchanges between Japanese artists and curators with collaborators from the Asia Pacific region. Your Voice is Mine is preceded by Alternating Currents (PICA, Perth, 2011) and Journey To The West (Lalit Kala Akademi, New Delhi, 2012).
This exhibition is co-organised by NUS Museum and The Japan Foundation. It is supported by Ricoh (Singapore) and Studio Miu.
Event photos
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