FACE WITHOUT NAME






 
Bayu Utomo Radjikin’s debut at The Substation Gallery, Singapore sees some continuum from the artist’s solo exhibition in Kuala Lumpur last year titled Unnamed. The artist revisits large portraits of his distinctive male protagonists dressed as Malay warriors, but the inclusion of a new element – the figures wearing fighter pilot helmets – is a slight deviation.
Or is it? Early in his career, Bayu often grappled with sociopolitical themes. As early as his university days, he addressed issues related to war and global atrocities, portraying figures in fragile situations and highlighting their cause to viewers. These themes featured in an array of mediums – installations, sculptures, and paintings – and so the artist’s inclusion of figures wearing fighter pilot helmets today is a glimpse of this “old” Bayu. The addition of text – adjectives used in relation to people and human emotions - in a number of his current works is another element that the artist has revisited from his past.
The works in Face without Name, remain true to the artist’s signature style. They are epic, large, and acutely realistic. And, the total showing is a miscellany of both charcoal works and paintings.
The physiognomic features of the artist’s signature male figures (alternately himself and a fellow artist) are detailed and pronounced, as are the attributes on the fighter pilot helmets. Both figures – masked and unmasked - are portrayed with a strong sense of drama made possible by the strong shadows and deep contrasts, which lend an air of nobility and importance to his subjects.
Why might this be? Why the focus on the human face? The answer to these questions can be found in other facets of Bayu’s oeuvre. The Malay warrior figure can be traced to Bayu’s Mencari Pahlawan (Quest of a Warrior) series, where the artist focuses on the notion of identity, questioning what it means to be Malay and what it takes to be a warrior, whilst the new figures – faceless, anonymous, and cold – instigate an entirely different set of questions: Who are they? What are they doing? Are these figures we are supposed to trust or fear?
By masking his figures with helmets, Bayu suggests that they could be anybody – you and I even. And their inclusion is not accidental, as the artist does refer to global events of our time and how soldiers become participatory elements in war, taking orders without questioning, and slowly lose all semblance of their own identity and eventually become unnamed faces.
Bayu’s universal and humanist view and the juxtaposition between the visible faces and the masked ones will probe audiences to consider oppositions, cultural and social identities, and – especially in light of the global events in the last decade - what it means to be human today.
Finally, Face without Name can be regarded as a culmination of sorts for this practicing artist of over twenty years. And quite likely, this body of work is a swansong before Bayu moves into new territory, producing works that focus on the female figure, subject matter that he recently showcased in Kuala Lumpur at HOM (House of MATAHATI) in a solo exhibition titled Cinta Kasih.


faceless III : Yang tersurat
2011/ Acrylic on canvas / 81 cm diameter
Avalaible




faceless IV : Yang Tersirat
2011 / Acrylic on canvas / 81 cm diameter
Private Collection




faceless I : Beraja di Mata
2011 / Acrylic on canvas / 200 x 200 cm
Private Collection

faceless II : Bersultan di Hati
2011 / Acrylic on canvas / 200 x 200 cm
Private collection




faceless V : Dari Mata Turun ke Hati
2011 / Charcoal & acrylic on canvas / 260 x 200 cm
Private collection




Mengangkat Sembah Menjunjung Titah
2011 / Acrylic on canvas / 183 x 511cm (Triptych)
Artist's collection





untitled 4
2011 / Charcoal & acrylic on canvas / 165 x 228 cm
Private collection





untitled 5
2011 / Charcoal & acrylic on canvas / 165 x 228 cm
Avalaible





limabelas
2010 / Charcoal on canvas / 500 x 200 cm
Collection of GALERI PETRONAS






Gallery Installation


































UNNAMED













As a recognised figurative painter in Malaysia, Bayu Utomo Radjikin, reveals his ongoing passions for medium and subject in his latest solo exhibition, Unnamed at House of Matahati. Through a signature style of epic realism and the Malay male protagonist Bayu continues to showcase his own carefully painted sense of dramatic physical theatre. Practising as an artist for nearly 20 years his career has focused on a diverse range of subject matter from public and personal identity through to social commentary and international political tensions. 

Nevertheless, such diversity has been consistently mediated through meticulously executed, highly emotive human subjects. Unnamed presents Bayu’s recent work in painting and charcoal. The exhibition focuses once more on the artist and his friend in elaborate poses that explore the spectacle of male identity.  It is this mastery of figurative composition and draughtsmanship that set the stage for a necessary consideration of how the technical aspect of his practice facilitates this particular style of painted mythology and heroism.


Unnamed presents expressions of the male body through a mature sense of Figurative Realism, a style that praises strong composition and accurate form along with the intangible, emotional qualities of human life. The technical mastery of replication along with the desire to transform the real to profoundly ‘speak’ without words has driven many artists to the point of obsession. Bayu’s own passionate use of the body and hands in his work mimics the methods of communication as a painter who uses his hands and mind to create new versions of reality. 

These needs to express form through paint and the compelling mythologies that artists produce can be visually hypnotic and seductively dramatic. The aura that surrounds Bayu’s subjects and his position as the artist ‘creator’ have all led to the subsequent popularity and respect for his practice that continues to be one of the driving forces of technically advanced Figurative Realism in Malaysia today.








Being
2010 / Mixed media on canvas / 100 x 100cm
Private collection




satu
2010 / Charcoal on paper / 115 x 150cm
Private collection





dua
2010 / Charcoal on nylon canvas / 230 x 166cm
Artist's collection






dua
2010 / Charcoal on nylon canvas / 230 x 166cm
Artist's collection






empat
2010 / Charcoal & acrylic on nylon canvas / 200 x 200cm
Collection of Steve & Rosemary Wong





lima
2010 / Charcoal & thread on nylon canvas / 200 x 200cm
Collection of Datuk Ir Rosaline Ganendra





enam
2010 / Charcoal & thread on nylon canvas / 123 x 213cm
Collection of Raja Ali Raja Othman





tujuh
2010 / Charcoal on nylon canvas / 110 x 110cm
Collection of Yee Tak Hong





lapan
2010 / Charcoal & thread on nylon canvas / 200 x 300cm
Artist's collection




sembilan
2010 / Charcoal & thread on nylon canvas / 166 x 245cm
Private collection




sepuluh
2010 / Charcoal on nylon canvas / 200 x 300cm
Avalaible





sebelas
2010 / Acrylic on nylon canvas / 110 x 110cm
Private collection






duabelas
2010 / Acrylic on nylon canvas / 230x 166cm
Collection of Pakhruddin & Fatimah Sulaiman





tigabelas
2010 / Acrylic on nylon canvas / 200 x 400cm
Artist's collection





empatbelas
2010 / Acrylic on nylon canvas / 200 x 400cm
Artist's collection



Untitled 3

2010 / Charcoal on paper / 280 x 150cm
Collection of Syed Nabil Syed Nahar








Tafaqkur

2009 / Acrylic on canvas / 275 x 195cm
Private collection



INFINITY IX
2009 / Acrylic on canvas / 200 x 200cm
Private collection






INFINITY VII
2009 / Acrylic on canvas / 200 x 200cm
Collection of Steve & Rosemary Wong




Untitled
2010 / Charcoal & acrylic on nylon canvas / 230 x 116cm
Private collection 




Untitled 2
2010 / Charcoal & acrylic on canvas / 230 x 116cm
Private collection




The Portrait XI
2009 / Acrylic & charcoal on canvas / 200 x 145cm
Private collection







The Portrait X

2009 / Acrylic & charcoal on canvas / 200 x 145cm
Artist's collection



INFINITY VIII

2009 / Acrylic on canvas / 200 x 300cm
Collection of Bank Negara Malaysia





INFINITY : Between You...and Me
2009 / Acrylic on canvas / 200 x 300cm
Collection of Lim Edin Nom