“Life is a constant state of conflict and struggle, driven by the pursuit of desires, power, money, and fame. In the process to find meaning and happiness in our lives, we are constantly challenged by the darker side within ourselves. The root of evil to many of the sufferings, violence, and unjust comes from the wolves within each one of us.” – Boo Sze Yang
AC43 Gallery is pleased to present Boo Sze Yang’s latest solo exhibition, Dancing with the Wolves, which features over 15 oil works completed in the period of 2015-2021. The show spotlights the artist’s latest series of work, which explores the validity of Plato’s notion of an ideal society comprising people in observance of their classes and duties (producers, auxiliaries, and guardians), in contrast with Thomas Hobbes’s view on human nature as selfish and destructive. Darkly comic and brimming with technicolour theatricality, the paintings provoke viewers to contemplate the performative aspect of reality as they navigate daily through the optics that postulate as truth in today’s heightened post-truth digital era.
These works by Boo Sze Yang probes our perception of truth and reality, and projects another dimension for contemplating scenes of civic discontent and unrest that have been circulating in the global media in recent years. After studying and re-composing images of protest and punishment, Boo Sze Yang reframes the scenes by blowing up the uncanny repetition of figures, synchronised dance moves, and poster-like mise-en-scene. Each painting is titled after a well-known song that had been used in certain protest movements around the world, like “Another One Bites the Dust”, “Too Young to Die” and “Don’t Take your Guns to Town”, creating an intertextuality that enriches our imagination of the scenes and emotions beyond the visuals of his canvases.
Boo Sze Yang explains that, “Good actors effectively communicate the characters that they are playing to an audience – like artists who tell stories, provoke emotional reactions in their audience, and make people think. These paintings are motivated by political situations and social unrest around the world, serving as comic observations of the drama in the world we live in.”
With Dancing with the Wolves, Boo Sze Yang invites us to contemplate from an ironic distance the complex battle – physical and moral – between civilians and law enforcement groups (and governments), as each group tries to uphold what is right and safe for the society. In the face of ideological conflicts, how does one sift through the relativity of truth and reality? As viewers processing these events through our digital screens and devices, to what degree can we trust the narratives that are constantly being shaped and framed for us?
Watch the exhibition teaser here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=47XYYTo2nm0