Jim Supangkat |
* 1948 in Makassar (ID), lives and works in Jakarta (ID)
With his installation Kamar Ibu Dan Anak, Jim Supangkat takes us back to the Indonesia of the 1970s, a time when life was determined by a rigid, paternalistic regime – a circumstance that was to have fatal consequences for women and children. Supangkat presents a chair, a cupboard, and a child’s bed made of heavy, dark wood riddled with metal elements. Metal bars close off the bed; a pair of female legs, hanging on chains, are locked up in a cupboard with a metal door on one side and a glass front. Women and children are the prisoners of a dictatorship extending even into the most intimate space, the place where people sleep. And while the fatal effects on development and lives, especially on that of the children and thus also on the next Indonesian generation, remain unspoken and are barely imaginable, the repression and violence in such a social climate become physically tangible to viewers of the installation. Kamar Ibu Dan Anak (Bedroom of a Woman and her Child), 1975 (Reconstruction 2006, 2011) |