Eunice Sanchez (b.1993) is a Filipino artist that engages with themes related to preservation and perception through photography and alternative photographic processes. Sanchez was named the Silver Recipient in the book (self-published/documentary) category at the International Photography Awards Philippines (2017) and was a resident at Visualizing Histories, a collaborative project between Museum Collective, Load Na Dito, and Sa Sa Art Projects, supported by Asian Cultural Council (2021). She was also selected in the ASEAN Artists Residency Programme, a month-long residency project held by ASEAN Secretariat, Maybank Foundation, and Sharjah Art Foundation (2022).
Nature Shankar (b.1996) is a Singaporean visual artist who approaches painting/drawing as an object and monument. Her work is material, process, and movement driven. With an almost makeshift and tactile approach to making, her works and overall practice teeter on the edge of being “in progress”, laced with a distinct sense of humanity.
Nature is interested in intimate forms of persistence, resistance and reclamation. Through materiality and observations of the everyday, she uses the notion of comfort to explore our ever evolving relationship with these themes.
Based in New York City, Nature is pursuing her MFA as a Merit Scholarship candidate at Pratt Institute. She has exhibited internationally such as with Gajah Gallery, Indonesia (2018), Jendela Visual Art Space Esplanade, Singapore (2021) and Art Fair Philippines (2022). She has participated in residencies in New York (USA), Bandung, (Indonesia) and Singapore.
In this new series of works, Nature Shankar continues her explorations into materialising comfort. Taking inspiration from her bedroom window and the life outside it, her works attempt to contextualise her discomfort with leaving home. Touch heavy method of making driven by material, process and bodily engagement attempt to give physicality to the intangible — a loss of agency and the stream of consciousness that accompanies it.
What she categorises as ‘everyday materials of comfort’, both tactile and intangible, undergo numerous forms of manipulation and experimentation. Materials associated with her ‘anti-anxious’ life at home such as ingredients from comfort food, journals and quilts are processed using bodily intervention and various craft inspired techniques. The intangible comfort heavily drawn from for this series is the rhythmic (or reliable) swaying of a slightly uprooted tree outside her window. Together, boundaries of these materials are repeatedly pushed as they are constantly constructed and deconstructed in an erratic process that not only requires,but demands space.
Nyein Su (b. 1981) is a Burmese artist who specialises in both the watercolour and oil mediums, through which she deals with the current and past political concerns in her homeland, Myanmar. In 2010, she was awarded a scholarship to study at Nanyang Academy of Fine Arts (NAFA), where she specialised in Western painting and portraiture. She has competed and was first in the ACR art competition and participated in the NUSS Paint a Portrait commission project. She founded Art Village Gallery and Studio in June 2014.
For ‘Patterns of Change’, Su brings to life her new series, ‘Empty Seats’, taking aim at her political concerns in her home country, Myanmar. With a stirring combination of subtle and ethereal brushwork, Su draws attention to the political climate of her homeland in riveting style.
Wana Wanlayangkoon (b.1986) is a Thai artist with a focus in political history. His father, Wat Wanlayangkoon was a prominent political activist, award-winning writer and refugee who had to flee from Thailand. With Wana’s personal history and vested interests, visual arts became the medium for him to explore the stories that he wants to tell. Wana has participated in several group exhibitions for contemporary art in Thailand, namely the “Mementos/Monument & reMinders”, Plan Samret Gallery and “1 2 10”, Joy Man Gallery, both in Bangkok.
In Hallow Man, Wana reflects upon the perception of the late Thai king, King Bhumibol Adulyadej. Even in the advent of the new reign, numerous people are still found to yearn for the nostalgic miracles of the previous king.