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: The Serenity of Madness
exhibition

| EXHIBITION |

Solo

DatesJuly 4 — September 10, 2016
Location
Artist
Apichatpong Weerasethakul
Curator
Gridthiya Gaweewong

The Serenity of Madness

Apichatpong Weerasethakul

MAIIAM Contemporary Art Museum is proud to present the museum’s inauguration show, Apichatpong Weerasethakul The Serenity of Madness, a retrospective of the Chiang Mai-based artist and filmmaker. The show will present Weerasethakul’s career trajectory from the first ex-perimental films to his most recent work, ranging across media from 16 mm film, digital video, video installation, photography, and print.

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Long admired as one of the world’s leading independent filmmakers, Apichatpong Weerasethakulhas won international acclaim since the early 2000s. However, few in Thailand have experienced his extensive body of contemporary artwork beyond his feature films. Made before and during his feature film productions from 1994 to the present, these works have served as a kind of catharsis for the artist. Presented together, they offer rare insights into Weerasethakul’s uniquecreative process, yielding a fascinating dialogue with his cinematic work.

For the past twenty years, Weerasethakul’s reflexive and non-linear works have explored the themes of memory, animism, Buddhism, haunting, and rebirth largely channeled through the narrative traditions of his native Isan region (the northeastern part of Thailand). The stories he conceives are filtered through diverse literary and cinematic genres including science fiction, adventure, and myth, as well as the tradition of American experimental film. In his films and vi-sual art works, memory is often juxtaposed alongside ephemeral and supernatural elements,such as light and phantoms, suggesting a fluidity and distortion in history and storytelling.

For the first time, The Serenity of Madness assembles nearly 20 visual artworks to reveal an unseen dimension of Weerasethakul’s working process. The exhibition follows a semi-chronological and non-linear approach, beginning with explorations of lighting, time and space both in reality and fantasy, and culminating with recent works engaged with the social reality in his homeland.

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Alongside rarely seen works, the exhibition will also feature archival and reference materials from the making of his films Mysterious Object At Noon (1997-1999, released in 2000), Blissfully Yours (2002), and Uncle Boonmee Who Can Recall His Past Lives (2010), scripts, and production sketch-es for films and videos. Works by collaborating artists and illustrators, such as Daen Sudsakhon and Freddy Nadolny will also be featured. Additionally, the museum will present Apichatpong’s newly re-mastered 30 short films in four screening programs.

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This exhibition was mainly supported by the Yanghyun Foundation, South Korea, which createdthe The Yanghyun Prize in 2008.

“This is a prize open to all international artists without any kind of prejudices such as nationality, age, gender, and ethnicity,” said Mrs. Choi Eun-young, chief director of the Yanghyun Foundation.

Past recipients include Cameron Jamie (USA), Isa Genzken (Germany), Jewyo Rhii (Korean), Akram Zaatari (Lebanon), Abraham Cruzvillegas (Mexico), Rivane Neuenschwander (Brazil) and Apichat-pong Weerasethakul (Thailand) in 2014. “With the prize and support, we hope the recipient flourishes and achieves wider accomplishment in art,” Choi said.

Installation View