ROTAN RATTAN 2025

Rotan Rattan: Notions of Labour — Kapuas Hulu
2025
Charcoal on paper set in wood and rattan screen
184 x 246 x 4cm

Rotan Rattan: Notions of Labour — Uttar Pradesh
2025
Wood, Plantation Chair, Rattan Canes
76 x 190 x 79 cm

“Rotan Rattan: Notions of Labour — Kapuas Hulu” features a large charcoal drawing inset into a rattan 6-panel screen, of a villager from Mungguk village in Kapuas Hulu, Indonesia gathering rattan from the forest. I had the privilege to visit them in April 2025 to live and learn with them. During the stay, they brought us rattan gathering, and taught us how to harvest, prepare, and weave with rattan, which they use to make mats, baskets, and tools. For their village, they do not harvest and craft rattan for sale. It's a resource that is part of their necessary daily living, and the skill of harvest and weaving is taught and passed down through generations, as part of communal care and storytelling.

“Rotan Rattan: Notions of Labour — Uttar Pradesh” features an industrial plywood panel lounging on a plantation/planter’s chair, common in South Asia and Southeast Asia under the 19th C British colonial rule. It's a lounge chair signifying colonial status and rule over farmers and farm lands with outward swinging, extendable arm rest, serving as a foot rest. Marks of rattan canes (a disciplinary tool) and an archive image of a worker holding up a species of rattan 'Calamus tenuis' from Kansrao, Dehra Dun Forest Division, Uttar Pradesh from a research text "Canes (rattans) : their occurrence, cultivation and exploitation in India / by R.L. Badhwar, A.C. Dey and S. Ramaswami" published in 1958 are torched and burnt into plywood. Here, the labourer is finally taking a rest in the seat of power.

First presented at The Private Museum, Singapore from 2nd Oct 2025 to 7th Dec 2025.

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