At Biennale Jogja XVI, Narratives and Counter-Narratives Unite
Mella Jaarsma and Agus Ongge, At
First There's Black (2021). Exhibition view: Biennale Jogja XVI – Equator
#6 2021 – Indonesia with Oceania, Jogja National Museum, Yogyakarta (6
October–14 November 2021). Courtesy Biennale Jogja Foundation.
Titled Dibungkam (Silenced, 2021), the painting's muted green and brown tones are reminiscent of military camouflage. At the focal point is the face of a man from the Dani tribe, surrounded by fragments depicting violence, repression, discrimination, and racism against the marginalised proto-Papuan.
Yanto Gombo, Dibungkam (Silenced,
2021). Exhibition view: Biennale Jogja XVI – Equator #6 2021 – Indonesia
with Oceania, Jogja National Museum, Yogyakarta (6 October–14 November 2021).
Courtesy Biennale Jogja Foundation.
Udeido Collective,
whose members are spread across cities in Papua, was established in 2018 to
encourage younger generations of artists to explore folklores and social issues
experienced by the Papuan. The name Udeido comes from the word 'ude', which
refers to a type of leaf commonly used by the Indigenous Mee to heal wounds.
Udeido Collective, Koreri
Projection (2021). Exhibition view: Biennale Jogja XVI – Equator #6
2021 – Indonesia with Oceania, Jogja National Museum, Yogyakarta (6 October–14
November 2021). Courtesy Biennale Jogja Foundation.
“For
Papuan artists to present artwork about the Papuan struggle in Java is
comparable to presenting it in the belly of the beast.”
In West Papua, the easternmost and most problematic region in Indonesia, attempts at development and modernisation are entangled with human rights violations and ongoing conflicts. For Papuan artists to present artwork about the Papuan struggle in Java is comparable to presenting it in the belly of the beast.
Exhibition view: Broken Pitch
x Juanga Culture, Biennale Jogja XVI – Equator #6 2021 – Indonesia with
Oceania, Jogja National Museum, Yogyakarta (6 October–14 November 2021).
Courtesy Biennale Jogja Foundation.
Footage portraying military violence clashes with the sounds of Papuan folk song 'Nyanyian Sunyi' ('Silent Song'), an anthem of Papuan resistance written by Sam Kapisa and deliberately sung in Indonesian.
Arief Budiman, Di Tanah
Orang Papua (On the Papuan Land, 2021). Exhibition view: Biennale Jogja
XVI – Equator #6 2021 – Indonesia with Oceania, Jogja National Museum,
Yogyakarta (6 October–14 November 2021). Courtesy Biennale Jogja Foundation
Agus Ongge initiated a reclamation of such knowledge by applying painted motifs onto bark-made cloth, including endangered fish from Lake Sentani.
Mella Jaarsma and Agus
Ongge, At First There's Black (2021). Exhibition view: Biennale Jogja
XVI – Equator #6 2021 – Indonesia with Oceania, Jogja National Museum,
Yogyakarta (6 October–14 November 2021). Courtesy Biennale Jogja Foundation.
At one point, Ongge brings up the colour red. 'In Java', Ongge notes, 'the colour red means brave, but here [in Papua], if you see the colour red on the street, by the tree, or in other places, it means blood has been shed and life was lost.'
Mella Jaarsma and Agus
Ongge, At First There's Black (2021). Exhibition view: Biennale Jogja
XVI – Equator #6 2021 – Indonesia with Oceania, Jogja National Museum,
Yogyakarta (6 October–14 November 2021). Courtesy Biennale Jogja Foundation.
Co-curated by artist Elia Nurvista and young curator Ayos Purwoaji, the Biennale's title Roots < > Routes dynamically encompasses different issues at once: the tension between culture and mobility; indigeneity and racialism; borders and diaspora; myth and modernity; situated knowledge and ecological crisis; the ideology of development and the limits of growth; traces of language and cultural assimilation; not to mention contemporary socio-politics.
Exhibition view: Game of
the Archive: One Decade of The Biennale Jogja Equator, Taman Budaya Yogyakarta,
Yogyakarta (6 October–14 November 2021). Courtesy Biennale Jogja Foundation.
Initiated by Woto Wibowo (Wok The Rock)—an artist and curator who works across contemporary art, design, and music—and developed with music composer and sound engineer Gatot Danar Sulistiyanto, Radio Isolasido unravels narrative and non-narrative acoustic phenomena.
Woto Wibowo (Wok The
Rock), Radio Isolasido (2021). Audio installation. Exhibition view:
Biennale Jogja XVI – Equator #6 2021 – Indonesia with Oceania, Jogja
National Museum, Yogyakarta (6 October–14 November 2021). Courtesy Biennale
Jogja Foundation
“While Biennale Jogja XVI starts with a dialogue about common socio-political conditions within eastern Indonesia, its purpose is to bridge social imaginations and give birth to new transformative languages in the process.”
Although operating on a limited budget and prepared during the catastrophic second wave of the pandemic in Indonesia, the Biennale's Equator series—a project that focuses on art and artists of equatorial regions—has developed an ambitious and expansive programme under the directorship of Gintani Nur Apresia Swastika, with forums, panel discussions, and performances, screenings, workshops, and curatorial tours.
Exhibition view: Game of
the Archive: One Decade of The Biennale Jogja Equator, Taman Budaya Yogyakarta,
Yogyakarta (6 October–14 November 2021). Courtesy Biennale Jogja Foundation.
At Taman Budaya Yogyakarta, an exhibition celebrates ten years of the Equator project, with Game of the Archive: One Decade of The Biennale Jogja Equator, complemented by a virtual museum created by Mivubi Team in the format of Minecraft in collaboration with artist Riyan Kresnandi.
Exhibition view: Game of
the Archive: One Decade of The Biennale Jogja Equator, Taman Budaya Yogyakarta,
Yogyakarta (6 October–14 November 2021). Courtesy Biennale Jogja Foundation.
Constituting the Biennale's 'Docking Program', the initiative involves exhibitions, performances, and public discussions that explore intersections of history, art, and culture, and was set up in response to the decentralisation issues that have become central to the Biennale.
Exhibition view: Game of
the Archive: One Decade of The Biennale Jogja Equator, Taman Budaya Yogyakarta,
Yogyakarta (6 October–14 November 2021). Courtesy Biennale Jogja Foundation.
At Pendopo Ajiyasa, Taiwan's national pavilion—co-organised by Kaohsiung Museum of Fine Arts, Taiwan-Asia Exchange Foundation, and National Culture and Arts Foundation—uses the ocean as a space to reflect on modes of being in the world through works by Chang Chih-chung, Rahic Talif, and C&G Art Group (Chieh-Sen Chiu and Margot Guillemot).
Exhibition view: Pendopo
Ajiyasa, Biennale Jogja XVI – Equator #6 2021 – Indonesia with Oceania,
Jogja National Museum, Yogyakarta (6 October–14 November 2021). Courtesy
Biennale Jogja Foundation.
Co-curated by Alia Swastika and Jongeun Lim, the exhibition at Museum dan Tanah Liat opens with a tent-like structure made of blue batik by Fitri DK, Tenda Perjuangan (Tent of Struggle, 2021). The tent portrays female frontliners in the Kendeng Farmers Action carried out in 2017 to save agricultural land and oppose the construction of a cement factory in Central Java.
Fitri DK, Tenda
Perjuangan (Tent of Struggle, 2021). Exhibition view: Hacking
Domesticity, Museum dan Tanah Liat, Biennale Jogja XVI – Equator #6 2021 –
Indonesia with Oceania, Yogyakarta (6 October–14 November 2021). Courtesy
Biennale Jogja Foundation.
Themes of tradition and custodianship are also documented in Etza Meisyara's Aarth (2021), a mixed-media installation revolving around a video produced in collaboration with Origin Research that explores the agricultural world of the Sunda people by documenting a harvest ceremony involving music performed by female farmers for Dewi Sri, the Goddess of Prosperity, later transformed by the artist into an experimental digital soundscape.
Etza Meisyara, Aarth (2021).
Exhibition view: Hacking Domesticity, Indie Art House, Biennale Jogja XVI
– Equator #6 2021 – Indonesia with Oceania, Yogyakarta (6 October–14 November
2021). Courtesy Biennale Jogja Foundation.
While Biennale Jogja XVI starts with a dialogue about common socio-political conditions within eastern Indonesia, it expands to bridge social imaginations further afield, resonating with struggles beyond the region, giving birth to new transformative languages in the process. —[O]
published in Ocula Magazine: link