Dance of Apsaras

  
artist biography
A COLLECTION OF ASIAN CEREMONIAL TEXTILES
MINI RETROSPECTIVE BY YEOH JIN LENG
LIFE DRAWINGS FROM CHELSEA DAYS C1958-1962 BY YEOH JIN LENG

 
  A solo exhibition by Yeoh Jin Leng

Reading into the iconography of the region of Southesat Asia necessarily involves the need to be aware and understand the cosmogony of the philosophical and religious foundations of the region, particularly of India. Nowhere in Southeast Asian countries can we not be confronted with influences and linkages which hark back to that country for their origins from early times.

The Vedas, the Brahmanas, and the Upanishads with the great epics of the Mahabharata, Puranas and the Ramayana, had been crucial in terms of the philosophical and theological foundations of Hinduism, Buddhism, Jainism, Tantrism, and a host of other religious belief- systems that took root across Asia and Southeast Asia, giving us unique cultures and their embedded value- systems. Great monuments such as Borobudur, Prambanan and the Angkor complex of temples with their rich iconography are testimony to the widespread influence of the cosmology in this region. The influence also brought about fascinating facets of traditions encompassing music, dance, the shadow play, textiles, architecture, fine metalwork, wood-carving, and a whole range of material culture that effloresced "like a thousand- petalled lotus over the region".

This installation of the Dance of the Apsaras is a celebration of the spiritual foundations of the arts of the region with its unique form, meaning and aesthetics developed over the millennia. Prana, Kundalini Yoga or Shakti power, the energy life-force of Hinduism and Tantrism, the Mother Goddess concept as the creative force of the cosmos, 'karma', reincarnation and the transmigration of souls, the Way of the Tao, the incandescent illuminating 'rebirths' of Buddhism, and the dying-resurrecting godhead of the Mysteries of another geographical sphere are explored for the underlying meaning infused in the creative and symbolic efflorescence of the arts across Asia and Southeast Asia.

Iconographic as well as the aniconic traditions of Asia are as old as the hills. The profound dimensions of their aesthetics are essentially different in conception, evolution and involution in artistic terms from the Hellenistic or Renaissance Art traditions of Europe.

(Western arts traditions are only a few hundred years old, good in the perception of mental materiality, and are at the 'crossroads' of crisis with the clash of civilizations and cultural foundations). There is a breadth and depth in the wisdom of the east that can touch the psyche in relation to beauty of another dimension, that is the "beauty of thought and nobility of significance" essentially different from the "the Greek desire of a supreme craftsman for beauty as an end in itself'.

"Essentially qualitative, like life itself, the Mind does not occupy space. For that very reason, it has no bounds in its mastery of space...

In Music, Man is revealed, not in a noise.

A lotus has in common with a piece of rotten flesh the elements of carbon and hydrogen. In a state of creation the difference is immense."
Tagore (The Religion of Man)

"Where the fire(Agni) is enkindled
Where the breath(Vayu) is controlled
Where the nectar(Soma) overflows
There the mind is born."
Shretasavatara
upanishads 11.6-7

Apsara (Absorn-Thal, Hapseri-Borobudur) has been chosen as the theme for this exhibition as a celebration to the traditions of the region that could be reconfigured or reconstituted with regard to the meaning underlying creation.

Yeoh Jin Leng