After Utopia: Revisiting The Ideal in Asian Contemporary Art

After Utopia: Revisiting The Ideal in Asian Contemporary Artis Singapore Art Museum’s (SAM) latest exhibition that examines humanity’s eternal yearning for a better world. Pivoting on ideas about ideals and principles, After Utopiacomprises iconic works of Southeast Asian and Asian contemporary art drawn from SAM’s permanent collection, as well as private collections and new commissions.

In naming his fictional island ‘Utopia’, writer Thomas More conjoined the Greek words for ‘good place’ and ‘no place’ – a reminder that the idealised society he conjured was fundamentally phantasmal. And yet, the search and yearning for utopia is a ceaseless humanist endeavor. Predicated on possibility and hope, utopian principles and models of worlds better than our own have been perpetually re-imagined, and through the centuries, continue to haunt our consciousness.

Where have we located our utopias? How have we tried to bring into being the utopias we have aspired to? How do these manifestations serve as mirrors to both our innermost yearnings as well as to our contemporary realities – that gnawing sense that this world is not enough?

After Utopia premises the idea of Utopia on four prospects. ‘Other Edens’ explores the image of the garden as a symbol of the originary paradise to which we long to return, even while reflecting back to us our current imperfections and fall from grace. Also encompassed in this strand are colonial imaginings of exotic dream-gardens overflowing with bounty, beckoning from distant, ‘undiscovered’ shores. ‘The City and its Discontents’ locates our aspirations to the ideal in the contemporary structures and environments we inhabit, and how these concrete realities fall short of the utopian impulses of architecture and urban planning, such that escape from the city to its opposite (or the ‘countryside’) becomes inevitable. ‘Legacies Left’ examines the legacy of ideologies that have left an indelible mark on the last century — thought experiments on which societies and nations have been built. The final chapter, ‘The Way Within’, journeys into the realms of self and psyche, where, eschewing the grand narratives of history – one utopia after another – a quiet thought lingers: perhaps, the search for the ever elusive utopia lies inward.

After Utopia: Revisiting The Ideal in Asian Contemporary Art is taking place at the Singapore Art Museum and will run from Friday, 1 May 2015 to Sunday, 18 October 2015.

Admission is free for Singaporeans and Permanent Residents. For more information, please see Singapore Art Museum’s Website.

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Deputy Editor

Gary is one of those proverbial jack of all trades… you know the rest. When not writing about lifestyle and culture, he dabbles in photography, graphic design, plays four instruments and is a professional wearer of bowties. His greatest weakness: spending more money on clothes than he probably should. Find him across the social world as @grimlay