Exhibition
R@MESH Volume II
13 Oct 2018 – 10 Nov 2018
Event times
Tuesday - Saturday: 11am - 7pm
Sunday: 11am - 6pm
Closed on Mondays and Public Holidays
Cost of entry
Free.
Address
- 5 Lock Road #01-06 Gillman Barracks
- Singapore
Singapore - 108933
- Singapore
Travel Information
- Nearest Bus Stop: Along Alexandra Road Opposite Alexandra Point (Bus Stop Number 15059) Available Buses: 51, 57, 61, 83, 97, 97e, 100, 166, 175, 408, 963 or 963E
- Nearest MRT Train Station: Labrador Park (Circle Line station CC27) Walking Directions from Labrador Park Station (~10 mins): 1. Exit Labrador Park station via Exit A and walk towards Alexandra Road. 2. Stay on the opposite side of the road from Alexandra Retail Centre (ARC) Shopping Mall. 3. At the first bus stop, take the sheltered walkway on your right into Gillman Barracks.
Sri Lankan-born Sydney-based artist Ramesh Mario Nithiyendran presents R@MESH Volume II, a solo exhibition of iconoclastic clay sculptures that explores gender, popular culture, exoticism and outsider aesthetics.
About
Sri Lankan-born Sydney-based artist Ramesh Mario Nithiyendran creates iconoclastic clay sculptures that explore gender, religion, popular culture, exoticism and outsider aesthetics. Within the last year, Nithiyendran’s irreverently grotesque figures have been presented across Asia to critical acclaim.
Known for his adventurous and unorthodox approach to clay, Nithiyendran has developed a unique sculptural language which has earned him an international reputation as "the bad boy of ceramics". Trained in painting and self-taught in ceramics, Nithiyendran’s sculptures are hand-built using techniques such as coiling and slabbing. His adherence to tradition ends at the firing stage at which point the artist employs an array of experimental glazes and lustres. With a sense of irreverence, Nithiyendran adorns his figures with unexpected objects such as garden hoses, hair, bracelets and false teeth, reflecting his equal disregard for heteronormative gender binaries.
His influences can be traced, in part, to the Shiva Linga, an abstract representation of the Hindu deity Lord Shiva. Layered with cultural references and evocative imagery, the phallic forms present in his work are paired with the figures’ smirking, sneering, guffawingfacial expressions. Beneath this visual cacophony is a penetrative (pun intended) glare at society's fundamental irony: that despite the phallocentricity of sport, politics, advertising and the entertainment industry, the sight of a phallus still shocks. Redressing the sexualisation of the female body and the fundamental representational imbalance authored by the deep-seated male gaze, Nithiyendran responds with an excessive, exuberant and rambunctious laughter in clay.
“Much ideological discourse, it seems, gets played out through societal attitudes to sex; especially religion, legislation or even policing. So, for me, using imagery of breasts and phalluses, and referencing these kinds of symbols, is a way to talk about other issues like patriarchy, colonisation, religion and censorship, and to address discourses around the body. To put it simply: when talking about power, sex is a really useful way to start the conversation”, says the artist in an interview with Ric Bower for CCQ.
R@MESH: Volume II is an expansion of the bold proclamations of Nithiyendran’s institutional shows which have since evolved into a self-reflexive investigation of relationships and power, holding a mirror to the world at odds. Traces of Nithiyendran's personality are embedded, as sartorial flamboyance, but also as self-mockery. Self-portraiture, according to the artist, is a theme that runs through all his work, toeing the line between narcissism and self-parody. Playing along with the idea of the artist as a brand in today's age of screen culture, Nithiyendran's laughter is truly contagious.