Marco Ferrarese

Marco Ferrarese

About the Author

Marco Ferrarese was born near Milano, Italy, and has lived in Penang since 2009, from where he covers Malaysia, India and the larger Southeast Asian region for a number of international guidebooks and publications that include Lonely Planet, South China Morning Post, Nikkei Asia, the Guardian, BBC Travel, and Travel + Leisure Southeast Asia.

In the footsteps of fellow countryman and homonymous Marco Polo, in 2012 Marco hitchhiked from Singapore to Italy across Silk Road routes and the Middle East. His debut novel Nazi Goreng (2013) was a bestseller in Malaysia until it was banned by the Ministry of Home Affairs in 2015. Marco has also played guitar in Malaysian hardcore punk bands and written a book about it, Banana Punk Rawk Trails (2015), and earned a PhD in subcultural anthropology from Monash University Malaysia. In 2017, he published “The Travels of Marco Yolo”, a collection of some of his published travel articles.

He and his Malaysian photographer wife Kit Yeng still call Penang home, even though they are on the road reporting from elsewhere most of the time. Know more about him and his books at www.marcoferrarese.com and www.monkeyrockworld.com and https://web.facebook.com/ferraresewrites/

About the Residency

After 10 years of hectic magazine publishing, Marco has come to Rimbun Dahan to try to slow down and concentrate on jotting down the draft of a new novel. It doesn’t have a title yet, but it will be a cheeky suburban horror story that draws on folklore, stereotypes and contemporary urban life to point the finger and make fun of the ethnic squabbles that are part of life in Peninsular Malaysia.

Rayji de Guia

Rayji de Guia

Rayji de Guia from the Philippines is taking up a two-month residence at Rimbun Dahan, from October to November 2022.

About the Artist

Rayji de Guia is a fictionist, poet, and illustrator. Her work can be found in Asian Cha, The Deadlands, harana
poetry, Journal of English Studies and Comparative Literature, The Pinch
, and elsewhere. She received recognition from the Gémino H. Abad Awards for Poetry and for Literary Criticism and the Carlos Palanca Memorial Awards for Literature. She also illustrated for issues of Aurealis Mag, Rogelio Braga’s Si Betchay at ang Sacred Circle (Balangiga Press), and Angela Gabrielle Fabunan’s Young Enough to Play (UP Press).

In 2019, she was a poet resident at the 12th season of Sangam House in Bangalore, supported by the Asia-Europe Foundation and Cambodian Living Arts (ASEF-CLA). In 2021, she was a fellow for fiction in the Bread Loaf Writers’ Conference, with support from the Rona Jaffe Foundation. Her stay in Rimbun Dahan is supported by artlink and Südkulturfonds. Currently, she is an instructor in the University of the Philippines.

More info: rayjideguia.com

Artist Statement

In this two-month residency, I will be working on completing my first book, Provincia y Dolorosa, a short story collection revolving around women in the rural Philippines who resist the colonial, catholic womanhood: intelligent, independent, great, mythological, ghostly women, women who care about other women, and women who love other women—all cast in the rich landscapes of Mayabo where the mystical exists in the everyday. The interconnected stories can be loosely read together as a novel, all anchored in the town of Mayabo, a fictionalized version of my rural hometown, Maragondon, varying in time period, tone, mode, and realism. The stories embody my multilingual, translational poetics, what I refer to as mustiness.

As a writer, I mine the material of my upbringing in the southern Tagalog region and my background in architecture to craft landscapes as sites of tension between the past and present, folk belief and catholic faith, native and colonial, among others. This tension is something I contend with linguistically in my prose, because my first language is Tagalog. Filipino culture has been intricately woven with more than three-hundred years of Spanish-colonial rule, and this hodgepodge of an existence is then subsequently translated into the English language.

The narratives in Provincia y Dolorosa draw from my experience, current and subsequent research and study, and the chismis of titas in Maragondon. My stories portray the sorrows that comes with being a woman in the rural and at the same time construct realities beyond these sorrows through language, culture, and history. As such, I write queer women and desire in the rural; the suffering that comes with being wife, mother, and sister; and the madness that arises from trying to survive. The specificity of my storytelling relies on its proximity and engagement with contemporaneity and popular laughter as they exist within political and social landscapes; it is impossible to tell these narratives in monolingual English, without the vernacular—which is to say, it is impossible without mustiness, an essential component in my writing to make it as authentic and accessible as I could using a colonizer language. I reject the domination of a standard, monolingual prose, my stories ultimately hanging in the motley of differences, where incommensurabilities abound, and italics abandoned. I keep in mind two levels of readership: first, the Filipino reader whom I refuse to alienate with monolingual English, and second, the international English-speaking reader who is overhearing the narrative with an understanding of almost everything but is always reminded that the story is only rendered in English. I do not assimilate what is left unassimilated, a recalibration that disrupts and reforms this neocolonial imposition as my own.

Paul Nickson Atia

Paul Nickson Atia

Paul Nickson Atia was an artist in residence at Rimbun Dahan for three months, from mid-July to mid-October 2022.

About the Artist

Paul Nickson Atia (b. 1992, Sarawak; lives and works in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia) is a young artist from Malaysia. His primary interest lies in converging theories and conceptual frameworks of arts, architecture, history, anthropology, culture, the geopolitics and identities in contemporary art practice and narratives. His third and most recent solo exhibition in 2022, ‘Counting Silence, Filling Space, Weaving Conversation’ at Rissim Contemporary affirms his vision of modular painting – over a hundred canvases, painting a myriad of squares, reflecting on his interest in time, modularity, and autonomy that informed his practice. Paul holds a degree in architecture, practicing and teaching locally for several years before turning his artistic pursuit towards drawings, paintings, and art installations.

https://www.instagram.com/nicksonpaul/
https://www.rissim.com/artists/35-paul-nickson-atia/overview/

About the residency

Torun Tanaʔ – There Is Something About Home

I began my residency in Rimbun Dahan while having my solo exhibition happening concurrently. The initial thought was for the residency to be a ‘thinking space’ to develop the Perhimpunan/Assembly project; a project conceptualized in 2019 that would speculate the encounter between a Dayak Man and a Renaissance Man – a dialogue between traditions and values with the ideals of contemporaneity and modernity.

During my time at the residency, I mainly worked with paintings as studies. These paintings are informed by the associative and metaphorical connections drawn towards the subject of my identity that I framed as structural and relational memories. Torun Tanaʔ is a phrase in the Bidayuh Jagoi dialect that translates into jungle/forest (torun) and land (tanaʔ); often associated with the idea of home, belonging, and place of origin or more aptly, homeland, that sets the more semantic approach towards the body of work. The visuals and figures represented in the painting studies are characterized by entirely personal narratives and stories of homeland.

I seek to tell the narratives of Torun Tanaʔ through stories passed down to me and recollection of my personal memories of walking and working the land with my family and relatives. The images and visuals are of ladders, vertical and A-frame-like structures for farming, structures built for drying laundry (commonly made from slender trees or bamboo), and other structures like the four (4) main pillars of the Bidayuh headhouse, Baruk – a reference towards the points of assembly and congregation for this body of work. Another significant reference is the Bung Bratak or Mount Bratak in Bau; the original ancestral settlement of Bidayuh elders of the Jagoi-Bratak origins for now over 40 main villages in Bau, Lundu, and Kuching.

In the final month of my residency, I built the structures resembling ladders that appear in the Obsesi/Obsession series (2019) and the current Perhimpunan/Assembly series (2022). Using wooden stilts as the base, the ladder structure is wrapped with melted plastic waste that I have been hoarding over the past years – a habit that I find amusingly weird but a norm, and the immediate and perhaps impulsive reaction towards the then critical and daring decision made by the government to ship over 450 tonne of plastic waste back to their country of origin. I adopted the photography technique David Hockney used with the polaroid camera and prints called ‘joiners’ to photograph the structure at various sites around Rimbun Dahan.

Apart from its rather commonly known metaphorical and rhetorical reference as an uphill journey and gradual ascent for something, I cannot quite pinpoint the significance of any of the ladders in my paintings until very recently after I finished building the 3-part ladder structure. Only towards the final week when assembling all the works done throughout the residency for documentation that I realized that it presents to me as a body and a structure of my own story and identity, of my own roots and homeland – memories of watching my family harvesting the crops and the fruits of the trees, and the hardships of taking care of the ‘home’, that the ladder has always been present.

Torun Tanaʔ is a mindscape and a repository of memory for Perhimpunan/Assembly project, and I am forever grateful for Rimbun Dahan, being my first art residency, to have given the opportunity to develop this project.

Dhavinder Singh

Dhavinder Singh

Malaysian artist Dhavinder Singh spent 6 months at Rimbun Dahan in mid-2022; his residency concluded with the studio exhibition “Please Do Not Sit — A Show About Chairs”, in September 2022.

About the Artist

Dhavinder Singh (b. 1983) is a Kuala Lumpur-based artist whose art practice, in essence, deals with the repurposing and reconfiguring of materials, through paintings, animation, assemblage and site-specific installations. 

Trained at the Malaysian Institute of Art (MIA) and later, the Cardiff School of Art & Design in Fine Art, Dhavinder finds himself still testing the parameters of his practice and the mediums he engages with. “On an emotional standpoint, my creative process is based on intuition,” he has said. “In my body of work, I tend to express and share a visual metaphor of my reaction based on a particular space and subject matter.” 

Bearing witness to the overdevelopment of Kuala Lumpur in the last few decades, Dhavinder’s deep affinity for the industrial area of Kuala Lumpur in which he grew up — Chan Sow Lin — features prominently in his work. This was evident in his most recent solo exhibition “Tagistan” (2020), where elements of these interests, sense of aesthetics, and manipulation of space culminated in the series’ engaging multidisciplinary nature.

Other solo exhibitions include “Test Tanah” (2019), “Recollectus” (2017) and “MO: Formal(and)scapes“ (2014).

Website: www.dhavindersingh.com
Instagram: @dhavindersingh

About the Residency

“Currently, I am working on a series of self-portraits using chairs – which is meant to be a playful reflection on different aspects of my personality. I did not plan to consciously work on this in my time at Rimbun Dahan. However, the woodworking aspect of that project is something I plan to take further during my residency, with the resources found in the surrounding areas of Kuang.”

About the Exhibition

From 27 August to 11 September 2022, Dhavinder opened his studio at Rimbun Dahan to the public, to show the works he had created during his residency, in a small exhibition. See below for images of some of the works, and download the exhibition catalogue.

Chan Kar Kah

Chan Kar Kah

Chan Kar Kah undertook a 3-month residency at Rimbun Dahan from January to April 2022.

During the residency, Kar Kah was developing her full-length work Prajñā Revisited, a multidisciplinary performance with composer Yii Kah Hoe, visual artist Sim Hoi Ling and lighting designer Tan Eng Heng. The work explores local Chinese identities, traditional and contemporary rituals, group memories of the Chinese community, and how these factors affect the Malaysian Chinese dance contexts.

Kar Kah returned to Rimbun Dahan for a short visit in June 2022 to capture video material for a digital video work, as part of the show SERENITY: A Glimpse Through the Traditional Lenses at George Town Festival 2022, in collaboration with cinematographer Joie Koo, dancers Yee Teng and Winnie Xuan, composer Yii Kah Hoe, lighting designer Tan Eng Heng, and visual artist Hoi Ling. The digital work captures still images and subtle movements of the dancers, in contrast with traditional houses at Rimbun Dahan.

About the Artist

Chan Kar Kah (b.1997) is a Malaysian interdisciplinary artist, choreographer, educator, and director of Marrow Collective. Kar Kah was trained in Chinese classical dance, Chinese ethnic folk dance, and contemporary dance at Beijing Normal University. In 2018, she founded Marrow Collective which explores the interstices of dance and visual arts. Kar Kah’s research on local Chinese dance surrounds the ancestral traditions and somatic memories of the Malaysian Chinese community, and their influence on Chinese dance in Malaysia. With later involvement in Chinese opera and Chinese martial arts (Nan Quan), she seeks the commonality between the body movements of these arts and the integration between them in Tanah Melayu. Her works also focus on Chinese philosophy, oriental body movements, and their integrations between the cultural exchanges in Southeast Asia. 

Abdul Shakir (Grasshopper)

Abdul Shakir (Grasshopper)

Our first digital art and projection mapping artist, Abdul Shakir spent a month at Rimbun Dahan from mid April to mid May 2022, experimenting with projections on organic surfaces, and producing visual elements inspired by the traditional carvings and other artefacts at Rimbun Dahan.

About the Artist

Abdul Shakir (also known as ‘Grasshopper’) is a multidisciplinary multimedia digital artist and one of the co-founders of Filamen, which focuses on projection mapping, light installation and interactive installation projects. Shakir has worked in post-production and production agencies, and has done various projects related to design and art: graphic design, motion graphics, projection mapping and interactive installation. His projects have gone beyond Malaysia and reached an international level, displaying his works in China, Hong Kong, Spain, and the USA. Some of the notable platforms in which he has shown his work are LAMPU Festival, Urbanscapes Art Festival, Rainforest in the City, and George Town Festival.

Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/grassh_opper/

About the Residency

Throughout my one month residency at Rimbun Dahan, I managed to experiment on two bodies of work. The first, and also the main one, is the “Organic Projection Mapping”.  Most of my previous projection mapping works were done mainly on manmade objects such as buildings and vehicles. This residency enabled me to start experimenting with organic projections, where I could explore the mapping process on living organisms such as leaves and trees. The process is different from the normal projection mapping I usually do. Instead of having mappings done based on existing blueprints or templates, I get to experience impromptu mapping on-site.

In total,  I’ve managed to do 4 mapping sessions around the Rimbun Dahan compound. Thanks to the facilities provided, I was able to do this without technical difficulties although it was done during the night time.

My daytimes at Rimbun Dahan were filled with visual developments. I managed to produce more than 30 visual elements, rendered out every day. These visual elements were then composed into motifs, inspired by traditional carvings and objects around Rimbun Dahan. 

I also managed to share my practice with other residence artists here at Rimbun Dahan. It was such an interesting session as we opened up to each others’ thought processes and will, hopefully, lead up to collaborative projects in the near future. 

On my final night in Rimbun Dahan, I compiled all the visual motifs I had produced during my stay and arranged and composed them to be projected onto the facade of the heritage house Rumah Uda Manap. I decided to bring this house back to life by introducing vibrant elements that are inspired by the surroundings in Rimbun Dahan. The idea is to give back to Rimbun Dahan, of everything I have gained here. 

Shan Shan Lim

Shan Shan Lim

Malaysian multidisciplinary artist and textile designer Shan Shan Lim joined us for a 3-month residency from March to May 2022.

About The Residency

Shan Shan approached her time with us as an opportunity to explore the boundaries of her artistic expression. Not content with limiting her work to a single medium, she experimented with cotton, wool, popsicle sticks, rice paper and linoleum. And the experimentation did not end there. Having foraged rocks from our forest at Rimbun Dahan and a local waterfall, she extracted earth pigments to concoct her own palette of natural paints. Taking the experiment further and drawing on her background as a weaver, she hand-dyed yarns using the Malaysian ikat technique and created a series of textile pieces. The resulting mixed media collection, a journey from the tangible to the abstract, is titled ‘The Shadow Self’.

“One does not become enlightened by imagining figures of light, but by making the darkness conscious.” — Carl Jung

We all carry a shadow. It represents a side of ourselves we choose to ignore. By focusing on the shadows cast by the world around her, Shan Shan unearthed her own shadow. For inspiration, she did not have to venture too far beyond her studio. Rimbun Dahan’s wealth of local flora offered up silhouettes of seeds, leaves, flowers, branches and herbs. The collection encourages us to find beauty in the overlooked shadow world that is tied to every blade of grass and every human being that walks the planet.

About The Artist

Shan Shan Lim (b.1993) is a multidisciplinary artist and designer based in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. Her works draw inspiration from a spectrum of cultures from her childhood in Malaysia, schooling in India and her bachelor’s in London. She specialised in weave and print at Central Saint Martins, earning a degree in Textile Design. She returned home to Malaysia where she founded her eponymous design studio in 2017.

Her work is a means to make sense of her environment, both physical and incorporeal. They reflect a search for harmony and spiritual freedom in a world of chaos. Each piece is a question simultaneously posed and answered, using intuition as her guide.

Her most notable exhibitions include Lokal Helsinki (2021), The Back Room (2020), Deck, Singapore (2020) and Bank Negara Malaysia (2018). She was also selected for the Art Girl Rising residency at Sepat House (2019).

Website: https://www.shanshanlimstudios.com
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/shanshanlim_

Lee Mok Yee

Lee Mok Yee

Malaysian visual artist Lee Mok Yee spent two months at Rimbun Dahan from March to April 2022 exploring different materials from Rimbun Dahan and its surroundings, creating structures connecting body and architecture.

About the Artist

Lee Mok Yee is a Malaysia visual artist and drummer born in Klang, a port town near the capital city, Kuala Lumpur, where he currently lives and works. A graduate of Dasein Academy of Art and the Fine Art program at Middlesex University of London, Mok Yee is an artist whose work is primarily concerned with the entanglement between the conceptual and the material. 

His work is process-focused and often interrogative of the aspect of ‘materials’ in art-making, choosing to work with ready-made or store-bought objects. Mok Yee re-arranges these materials as an act of interrogation against uniformity; pushing against the boundaries of function in mass-production, and in the re/arranging he questions the idea of moving within structures as an exploration of change and its futilities.

Website: https://www.leemokyee.com/
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/leemokyee
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/leemokyee/

About the Residency

During his 2-month residency at Rimbun Dahan, Mok Yee explored different materials inspired by Rimbun Dahan and the Malay kampung surroundings. Using scrap wood and PVC carpet that he bought from stores nearby, he attempted to build structures which connected body and architecture. The outcome was a study of materials, pending further exploration in this series of works.

Mok Yee also resumed his study of techniques he had used previously, creating drawings using charcoal on paper, and etchings on kitchenware. For Mok Yee, this practice was a kind of collective process of memory and form inspired by Rimbun Dahan.

Cheong See Min

Cheong See Min

Malaysian weaver and textile artist Cheong See Min is in residence at Rimbun Dahan from March to June 2022.

About the Artist

Cheong See Min is an artist, weaver and textile artist from Johor Bahru, Malaysia. She obtained a Master of Fine Art degree from the Graduate Institute of Applied Art in Tainan National University of Art, Taiwan, in 2020, and a Bachelor of Fine Art from Tunghai University, Taiwan, in 2017. In 2017, she received Nando’s Art Initiative Second Runner Up award and was also selected for Bakat Muda Sezaman Young Contemporaries 2019. In 2021, her work was also selected for the International Biennale Exhibition of Micro Textile Art “Scythia”, Ivano-Frankivs’k, Ukraine.

“I am an obsessive street observer and “collect” the way people unconsciously place their belongings in their neighbourhood. The rhetoric of object placement from the alleyways has inspired me and become the theme and motif in my artworks. Collecting materials from the street and recreating them within the concept of “textile”, my artworks are a collection of my memories and past experiences about the daily objects and people in places I have lived. In my works, I portray stories through textiles and the found objects, building self-understanding through the process.”

Website: https://seemincheong.wixsite.com/homepage
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/cymin_cheong/

About the Residency

In this three-month project, I plan to collect dried leaves, tree bark and fruit found in the garden of Rimbun Dahan, to dye with yarns and to produce a series of small artworks with the weaving techniques I have learnt in this time. Being resident in Rimbun Dahan full time, I believe it will draw me into different perspectives and comparisons between Malaysia and Taiwan, and will nurture my work in the tropical garden.

Anjali Venugopal

Anjali Venugopal in her studio at Rimbun Dahan.

Malaysian multidisciplinary artist Anjali Venugopal has joined us for a 3-month residency at Rimbun Dahan from June to August 2021.

About the Artist

Born (1995) and raised in Sabah, Anjali Nijjar Venugopal (Anju) graduated from Point College Malaysia in Kuala Lumpur with a Diploma in Film & TV Production.

Anju has always had a rebellious streak in their creative work. They do not like feeling caught or held down within their self expression. Most of their creative works are splayed-out messes, be it in their art performances, films or paintings. They’re always looking to break free from moulds that are constantly created by society to keep us in check. Their paintings are abstract and experimental pieces that are based on their impulses and self expression. They play with colours, different mediums and anything they can get their hands on. They love telling stories and finding different ways to merge their crafts.

Anju started exhibiting their artwork in 2015, back home in Sabah. Since then, they have exhibited their paintings around Malaysia. They exhibit their artwork yearly in Sabah Art Gallery under the “Sabah Women Art Exhibition”s. Anju has exhibited their work in Japan in ”Building Bridges” (2016 ) and “Celebrating Life” (2018) in Gallery Mona, Tokyo. Apart from painting, Anju has 9 years of experience writing, acting, directing and art directing in theatre. Among their theatre works are “Puck and the Mechanicals Do a Performance in 8 Minutes” (2020), “To Which My Brother Laughed;” (2019), “Indicinelive! 6” (2019), “Teater Modular: Kurator Dapur” (2018), and “FAMILY” (2017). They also actively work in front and behind the camera in film productions. Their recent experimental film project “To Perdure”, which explores the idea of maintaining oneself through hardship, was funded by CENDANA’S Create Now Funding Programme. Anju is a curator for Malam Sayu, a performance art initiative which received a grant from INXO Art Fund 2019, which has hosted multiple open mics, outdoor performances, writing circles and makes art films. Anju‘s poetry has also been published in the KL Spoken Word Anthology When I Say ‘Spoken’, You Say ‘Word’. Anju was highlighted in CLEO Magazine’s COOL KL 2020 as “individuals making a change creatively and the youth who are impacting society in every way”.

Tumblr: pertatos.tumblr.com
Instagram: instagram.com/pertatos

Artist’s Statement

Other than currently drawing and painting the bugs that have been swarming me here at Rimbun Dahan, I am interested to explore the idea “To Create, To Destroy, To Put Back Together Again”. This idea started out as frustration with the need to keep creating as a way to prove my worth and how I would like to destroy it all and find myself once again within the rubble. But since arriving here and journaling a lot, I have realised that a lot of life includes being destroyed and being rebuilt. One example is a caterpillar and how within a cocoon it completely liquifies itself before reforming again and becoming a moth. The same thing happens around us, in ourselves, our relationships, life and death, and in society. I am keen to explore a lot of questions I have been asking myself through different mediums of art. What are the ways to destroy? What exactly gets destroyed? How heavy is the emotional toll linked to destroying? What does destroying, creating and starting again mean? What is it like to continuously pick up the pieces? Is destroying always linked to rage and are there different types of rage? What is rebuilding and the difference between willingly rebuilding and forced rebuilding? I am using the time, space and energy that Rimbun Dahan offers to properly delve into my exploration and hopefully answer all these questions (or not).