Biennale fever in Indonesia: temporary sites for contemporary art

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Agus Suwage, Social Mirror #3, 2013, trumpet, copper, wood and car audio systems, 118 x 24 x 70cm; image courtesy the artist

Biennale fever in Indonesia: temporary sites for contemporary art ROY VORAGEN Today, large-scale exhibitions are a global phenomenon; with hundreds of biennales, triennales and art fairs organised around the globe it’s physically impossible to visit them all. This fits the trend of the past few decades to view the development of contemporary art as one of – assumedly – cosmopolitisation. While biennales were initially part of nation-building processes, now they are often used as a way of city branding (flavoured with a dose of art as politics to hide this from plain sight). Biennales are hot in Indonesia as well: Yogyakarta will launch its twelfth biennale this month (from 16 November) just after the fifteenth Jakarta Biennale (from 9 November). Both biennales were not continuously organised: Jakarta’s biennale started in 1968 and it also changed its name a few times. Not so long ago, Jakarta was home to two biennales – the CP Biennale was held in 2003 and 2005. Hoodlums operating under the guise of Islam disrupted the second edition, and senior curator Jim Supangkat decided to close the artwork that caused the protest from view,1 after which participating artists decided to remove their works, effectively closing the biennale. Bandung had the intention to house a biennale as well, the Bandung Art Event, but it was only held once, in 2001, and was discontinued because of a lack of funding. For such a huge country, Indonesia’s contemporary art community is relatively small. However, artists are thriving creatively as well as commercially at home and abroad. For example, Albert Yonathan Setyawan, Sri Astari, Eko Nugroho, Entang Witarso and Titarubi are representing Indonesia in the current Venice Biennale, with Rifky Effendy as curator of the first Indonesian pavilion. Indonesia art monthly AUSTRALIA

was also given its own pavilion as a focus nation at Art Stage Singapore (‘We Are Asia’) earlier this year. Jakarta and Yogyakarta are both home to biennales, which might be perhaps a bit much. Both cities and biennale organisations lay claim on a substantial history to make the decision near impossible about which city should predominate (and who should take that decision?). Staging them in alternate years may work better for logistical reasons: As in 2011, both biennales this year will open within a week of each other this year, a blessing for foreigners, though, who are able to see both events in a single trip. Often, in exhibition catalogues, the lack of state support is lamented. Curator Rizky Zaelani, for example, wrote: When the state’s bureaucracy is not – or, perhaps, not yet – able to organise its wealth so that it can support and develop infrastructures for the art, the ‘fate’ of the art development cannot be supported by strong and capable institutions. As a result, various artistic events are held with neither coordination nor long-term plans.2 For three reasons this fatalism might not be warranted. Art organisations like Cemeti Art House in Yogyakarta (currently celebrating its 25th year), Common Room Networks Foundation in Bandung, and ruangrupa in Jakarta, to name just three, have shown that they do more than fill the gap left by the state without the need to copy strategies that have proven to be successful in the West.3 Biennales could learn a lot from these organisations; for example, that with energy, passion and dedication it is possible to organise ambitious events that attract Indonesian 2 6 5 N o ve m b e r 2 0 1 3 9


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