- 455
斯裡哈迪·蘇達索諾
描述
- Srihadi Sudarsono
- 《默拉皮火山與婆羅浮屠:冥想》
- 款識:畫家簽名並紀年2006;簽名、題款並紀年2006(背面)
- 油彩畫布
- 130 x 120 公分;51 x 47 1/4 英寸
來源
展覽
出版
Lindy Poh,《斯裡哈迪·蘇達索諾及蔡逸溪作品展》,新加坡,格雅畫廊,2006年,第26-27頁
Condition
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拍品資料及來源
As a student of S. Sudjojono, a national artist who transformed Indonesian modern art with his realist landscapes and narratives, Srihadi’s early career was largely influenced by his mentor’s creative and political ideals. However, unlike the older artist who painted pastoral scenes, Srihadi chose to fill the landscapes of his works with vivid colors, and energetic brushstrokes, as means to convey his emotions to the audience.
Together with the shift of artistic sensibilities in his paintings, Srihadi’s choice of subject matters also changed, as the artist matured and his paradigms evolved. Mt. Merapi and Borobudur: State of Meditation represents these changes in the artist’s chosen motifs, and shows a deliberate divorce from the abstract styles that embodied Srihadi’s earlier works. The painting is a depiction of the famous 9th century Mahayana Buddhist temple that is located in Java, with the volcano Gunung Merapi visible in the distance.
The artist’s Borobudur/Merapi works may be viewed as “…visual elegies that evoke notions of infinity and the sacramental. They are at once visionary, luminous and engulfing. That such restraint can, also effectively generate this ‘epic quality’, eliciting a sense of awe, attests to Srihadi’s command of the media and the message. These works are celebrated as his tour de force series. [His] reputation as a brilliant colorist is also nowhere more persuasive than in these series where his choice of colors, (the uncommon violet for landscapes), saturation and contrast of colors (for instance the orb of white for the moon in the pitch dark sky) effectively heighten the drama of these scenes. Borobudur and the gunung emerge as silhouettes, haloed by an electrifying charge that radiates into the darkness”1.
Throughout his oeuvre, Srihadi has dedicated his paintings to the Javanese culture, a reference to the artist’s personal history, values, and ultimately to his own rasa, also known as the Javanese code for behavior. As stated by the Australian scholar Paul Stange, “Rasa is both the substance, and at the same time the essence, of what we perceive and understand, and the vibration of the bodily components that perceives it… It is the means that we use to understand the truth of our inner self”2.
Within this context, the present work takes on an even greater meaning. The scene that is shown in Mt. Merapi and Borobudur: State of Meditation may be an extension of the artist’s identity. The physical presence of the landscape a metaphor for the thoughts Srihadi wants to express, and share with the public.
1Linda Poh, Srihadi Soedarsono and Chua Ek Kay: Drawing Ground, Gaja Gallery, Singapore, 2006, p. 3
2Jean Couteau, Srihadi Soedarsono: The Path of the Soul, Lontar Foundation, Jarkarta, 2003, p. 3.