BALINESE POLITICAL ART
‘New Gods, Old Gods’ is a political art
exhibit at the Athens Institute for Contemporary Art (ATHICA), in Athens, Georgia,
USA. It showcases the work of Balinese artist I
Made Bayak Muliana, who was visiting from Bali. Bali is an island in
the Indonesian archipelago, now heavily favored by non-Indonesian tourists,
retirees and surfers from places like Australia,
China, the U.S. and Japan. This is what happens to a
place that has been declared ‘paradise.’
History in a Painting, Layer by Layer |
Made
Bayak’s work references the mass killings of Communists, leftists, ethnic
Chinese and ‘critical thinkers’ in 1965 by the Indonesian military and their
militias, with support from the U.S. Between 500,000 to 1 million were
slaughtered, though some estimates run as high as 3 million. The U.S.
government under Dean Rusk provided ‘kill lists’ for the military, along with backup support from U.S. troops in nearby Vietnam
and Subic Bay, the Philippines.
This
slaughter eliminated the Indonesian Communist Party (PKI) and led to an Indonesia
tightly controlled by a three decade-long right-wing dictatorship under
Sukarno’s successor, Suharto. These
massacres had a lasting effect. They cleared
the way for the present economy of mass tourism in Bali,
eliminating any social forces that would question this kind of development. For instance, Communist women’s groups were
liquidated, who would have opposed homes being leveled for hotels. The issue of mass tourism forms the second inspiration of Made
Bayak’s artistic work.
Mass
tourism is now displacing the Balinese and making parts of the island
unaffordable through the familiar process of gentrification. It has taken land away from farmers and
fisherman and has put the island ‘up for sale’ to the highest bidder. It also has an environmental effect. The tourist industry dumps tons of garbage, depletes
the water supply, damages the mangroves, while the building of hotels and retirement homes reduce forest cover. Indonesian
and foreign investors are now planning to build an artificial tourist island in
the most beautiful bay in southern Bali near the largest city of Bandung. This tourist Disneyland
is a focus of an oppositional ‘Bali Not For Sale’ movement which Made Bayak is
a member of.
Made Bayak
learned nothing about the 1965 mass killings in his Indonesian school, and only
later did he talk to survivors who remembered it. He has a series of excellent small pictures
depicting life in an Indonesian prison as described by one of these survivors. One of his large canvases contains elements
of Balinese history – the arrival of the first tourist ships in the 1920s, the bloody
1965 slaughter and the modern dredging and construction damaging the Balinese
environment in the present. Another
presents a pastoral tourist scene of rice fields, peasants, bamboo, palms and
mountains, with the word ‘Sold Out’ over it, with black skyscrapers punching
the sky, surrounded by demons and skulls.
Made Bayak
works in acrylic paint on canvas, partly because it dries quickly and its colors are
vibrant, while breathing oil paint fumes is smelly and can be toxic. He uses traditional Indonesian Hindu colors -
red, black and white - and Hindu cosmological figures to tell some of the
stories depicted in his works. Large long-tongued
red demons, gods, dragons and witches populate some pictures and tell part of his
stories.
Mass Killing in Bali 1965 |
In a live performance,
the artist covered a map of Bali with the words
“For Sale” plastered across it and covered another map with the words “Mass
Killing” all over it. He also has a series of works, not shown at
the Exhibition but in a booklet called “Plasticology
– Trashed Island.” He uses plastic waste picked up in Bali
and its surrounding waters to create sculptural art. This art references his concern for the
Balinese environment, which is being choked by plastic, some of which is the
product of the tourist economy.
In a
discussion, Made Bayak pointed out that many of the things happening in Bali
are happening all over the world – gentrification, over-tourism, uncontrolled
waste, destruction of environments, displacement of people, privatization of
land, deforestation and the crushing of any opposition. Mass tourism can be seen in Barcelona,
Venice, Amsterdam,
some Caribbean ports, Dubrovnik, the Taj Mahal, Italy’s Cinque Terre, Maya
Bay in Thailand,
the Great Wall of China, Kyoto, New Zealand, Iceland and anywhere large tourist
ships dock. Even Mount Everest, where
the trash and bodies are piling up.
At present,
political art in the U.S.
is for the most part invisible, a sidelight to the emphasis on ‘personal
expression’ or marketability alone. This
is similar to Bali, where most ‘art’ is the
creation of idyllic landscapes for tourists.
This exhibition breaks through the taboo that art should only be about
decoration in style, method, color or personal individuality.
That it should be more than ‘arts for arts sake.’ It points to the wider social issues the
world is facing, as the ‘old gods’ of
life are being replaced by the ‘new gods’
of profit and capital.
Made Bayak
has websites here: https://madebayak.wordpress.com/ and here:
http://madebayak.com/about/
The Kulture
Kommissar
April 4,
2018
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