4. The Other Stories as Preludes to the 1990s
Obscured Versions of UiTM During the Late
1980s
Despite Piyadasa’s
seemingly acute elucidation (and its echoes by other writers), his narrative of
the so-called UiTM-centered Malay revivalist proclivities is also not entirely
correct.
For example, a survey
of artworks produced by UiTM students from 1980 until 1990 according to artist
Fauzan Omar (who lectured at UiTM in the 1980s), reveals a diverse range of
styles and approaches, including the use of figures. Students such as Amron
Omar, Rosli Mat and Samjis Mat Jan, were known and admired for their skill in
rendering figure as a subject.(49)
Amron’s Pertarungan II (1980) and Potret Diri (1982), as well as Samjis’s Rendezvous (1984) are several examples of interest in the use of figures amongst
UiTM students.
‘Figurative drawing’,
as informed by Fauzan Omar, was not discouraged. It was even taught by artists
such as Fauzan himself, Amron Omar and Hasnul J Saidon in the late 1980s.
Senior or advanced drawing class ran by the late Ismail Zain for example, used
live model. Even artist Ahmad Shukri Mohamed of the famous ‘Matahati’ group,
who was a junior student in 1988, admitted that he had volunteered as a ‘live
model’ for Ismail Zain’s drawing class.(50) There was
a period in which the use of figure in drawing class was dropped, but according
to Fauzan, it came out of personal interpretation, not institutional directive.
Figure was also
featured in the artworks of other UiTM students during the late 1980s. Amongst
them include Azimah Ahmad’s Siri ‘Kool
and the Environment’ (1985), Zulkifli
Mat Shariff’ Harapan (Hope) (1986),
Noor Aishah Abd. Rahman’s Under One Roof (1986),
Hasnul J Saidon’s Orang Ulu – Rhythm
& Dance (1987), Mohd Amin Busu’s Boy
From Lenggong (1988) and Blind Jennie (1989), Haron Mokhtar’s Siri Jugra (1988), Abu Sareh Haron Untitled (1989), Romli Mahmud’s Songket dan Kimono (1988), Mohd Zaki
Ghazali’s Rumah Nenek Tak Ada Letrik (Grandmother’s
House Has No Electricity) (1989) Raja Shahriman’s early mutant figures in
early 1990s, Hamidi Basar’s Bas Mini
(Mini Bus) (1991) and Hamdan Shaarani’s Pasar
Tani (Farm Market) (1992).(51)
In addition, several
artists in the late 1980s were already using figure in their artworks such as Raja
Azhar Idris’s Momba (1980), Norma
Abbas’s Something To Tell (1982), Zheng
Yuan-De’s He Who Was The Hero Just Now (1984),
Yusof Ghani’s Hilal (1987) and Siri Tari – Bahjat (1988), Ahmad Azhari
Mohd Noor’s Potret Puan Marina Yusof (1987),
Sylvia Lee Goh’s Young Family (1988),
Chang Chin Huat’s Untitled (1986) and
Goh Ah Ang Pergerakan (Movement) (1989).(52) If there was a lack in the use of human
figure amongst Malaysian artists then, it was probably due to the popularity
and commercial appeal of international abstract style and water-color paintings
more than due to the Malay-Islamic nationalistic forces. In fact, one may
propose that the marginal use of human figure during the 1980s can be
attributed to the forces of the market more than other factors.
The idea that
‘figurative representation in particular for artists from UiTM is a means to
challenge the institution’s tenets’ is preposterous, if one refers to UiTM in
the late 1980s. The discouragement (of figure) and encouragement (of
Malay-Islamic decorative impulse), according to Fauzan Omar, were never the
official tenets of UiTM.
Another survey of
artworks produced by lecturers from UiTM during the same period reveals
diversity of styles, medium and approaches as well. Artworks such as Ruzaika
Omar Basaree’s Dungun Series (early
1980s), Ponirin Amin’s Alibi Catur Di
Pulau Bidong (Chess Alibi in Bidong Island) (1980), Fauzan Omar’s Layer Series (1981), Awang Damit’s Harapan (Hope) (1982), the late Joseph
Tan’s Dungun Memories (Hill of Thyme) (1983),
Zakaria Awang’s Arrahman (1982), the
late Ahmad Khalid Yusof’s Jawi and Nature
13 (1984), Ariffin Ismail’s Taming
Sari III (1987), Yusof Ghani’s Siri
Tari (late 1980s), Hashim Hassan’s Penceroboh
(The Intruder) (1987), Raja Zahabuddin Raja Yaacob’s Indraputra (1988), Yusoff Othman’s Pulau Pangkor (1988), Kamarudzaman Md Isa’s Tribute to Bapak (1989), Ham Rabeah Kamarun’s Globe (1990) Wan Ahmad Mohamed’s Chamber of Fertility (1990), and Choong Kam Kaw’s Image 90-1 (1990), reflect diversity.
With such a diverse
range of strong personalities (and artistic ideologies) it is certainly too
simplistic to suggest that there was a sign of ‘master narrative’ enforcing a
‘politically-defined cultural vision’, founded on ‘Malay-centered discourse and
dominance’. There was indeed a sign of academic and artistic interest in
researching Malay tradition and Islamic spiritual sources in UiTM, as with many
other interests or proclivities, something that should be encouraged in any
academic institution.
‘Underpinnings of
modernist movement’, according to artist Fauzin Mustaffa (who was a student in
UiTM from 1984-1988) and Raja Shahriman Raja Aziddin (who was a student from
1986 – 1990), were not rejected.(53) They were in fact taught in the
liberal arts component by lecturers such as Amina Syed Mohamad, Mulyadi
Mahamood, Abu Talib, Usop Kopratasa, Khalil Imran, Mohamed Ali Abdul Rahman,
Jahani Ali and Dzul Haimi Md. Zin. Western-derived idea of modernity was also
not rejected. It was included in the syllabus, including Western philosophies
and aesthetics. Visiting and guest artists from outside, including from the
‘West’ were invited to give talks and workshops.
‘Prescriptive,
abstract approach to art making, founded on Islamic religious and design
principles’, as admitted by Fauzin and Raja Shahriman, was indeed exposed to
students. But so did abstract and semi-abstract approach founded on Persian
art, Indian portraiture, Japanese wood print, Chinese landscape painting,
Southeast Asian traditional art, tribal art from Sarawak and Sabah,
representing interest in studying a ‘broad-based multi-cultural’ Malaysian and
Asian heritage. According to Fauzan Omar, even expeditions were organised,
including to some remote areas in Sarawak and Sabah to expose students to ‘other’ cultures.
Akif Emir’s Home To Let : Rent, Free of Charge (1987), Fauzin Mustaffa’s Alam Fana Series (late 1980s) and The Lost Horizon II (1991), Mohd Noor
Mahmud’s Imej Series (late 1980s) and
Cave Series (early 1990s), Hasnul J
Saidon’s Orang Ulu – Rhythm & Dance (1987),
Romli Mahmud’s Songket dan Kimono (1988),
Azhar Manan’s Sarawak-September 1989 – Aku Lihat Warisan
Yang Hilang (I saw a vanishing heritage) (1991), Ahmad Shukri’s
Cabinet Series in early 1990s, Bayu
Utomo Radjikin’s Bujang Berani (Brave Bachelor)
(1991) and Haslinda Abdul Razak’s The
Ceremony (Baba Nyonya) (1995) represent a cross-cultural approach towards ethnic
subjects. The so-called ‘new notion of Malay-ness, as the defining cultural
paradigm’ and ‘the emergence of a new Malay-dominated force within the
Malaysian art scene’ were certainly not able to deter these UiTM’s graduates
from engaging in a ‘broad-based multi-cultural’ Malaysian (or Asian) heritage.
Unfortunately, these ‘smaller’
stories have been rather obscured in most of the major English-speaking discourses
on contemporary art in Malaysia.
Other trajectories in UiTM in late 1980s as
preludes to the 1990s.
Instead of rejection
as implied by Piyadasa, Western-derived idea of modernity was actually
questioned and debated in UiTM, something that should be encouraged in any
academic institution. The late Ismail Zain (who was a visiting lecturer) for
example, according to Fauzin Mustaffa and Raja Shahriman, was persistent in
encouraging students to question blind adherence to Western modernist
movements, especially abstract expressionism. He was more concerned with the
‘lack of critical attitude’ and ‘intellectual discipline’ in the modern art
scene of Malaysia
then. Consequently, he encouraged questionings and ‘self-critical tendency’,
‘in earnest’.(54)
In addition, Ismail
Zain was also more interested in globalization, semiotics, collage,
cross-cultural experience, multi-culturalism, hybridity, juxtaposition, mass
media, information theory, and cultural anthropology. He was in fact, already
experimenting with digital collage, which can be considered as a very important
prelude to the use of new media in the local contemporary art practice. Through
his highly investigative and semiotic approach towards drawing, students were
challenged to critically read and decode visual texts.(55)
There was a shift in
UiTM in the late 1980s, but not just a shift towards a ‘new notion of
Malay-ness as a defining paradigm’. Instead, the shift in UiTM was represented,
amongst many, by an interest in expanding new materials, exploring new language
of painting, printmaking and sculpture, as propagated by Fauzan Omar and other
new lecturers who just came back from oversea education such as Zakaria Awang, Ponirin
Amin, Yusof Ghani, Awang Damit, and Ariffin Ismail. In fact, according to
Zulkifli Yusof, his foray into installation can be credited to Zakaria Awang’s
early guidance and encouragements in the late 1980s.(56) Even expressionist
impulse itself, was recharged by Yusof Ghani and several other students such as
Ahmad Shukri Elias and Riaz Ahmad Jamil. Several students were also influenced
by the works of Awang Damit.
Fauzin and Raja
Shahriman further added that it was during the late 1980s that non-conventional
materials were explored by UiTM’s fine art students, while alternative methods
of presenting artworks were employed to question the modernist conventional
demarcation of fine art practice. Installation art and alternative print were
also explored. Other than Ismail Zain’s foray into computer art, Kamarudzaman
Md. Isa and later Ponirin Amin were also exploring the use of computer as an
image-generating and editing machine.
The result of such
shift can be traced in mixed-media work of Jailani Abu Hassan’s Catan Orang Kampung (Village Folks’ Painting) (1985), Nasir
Baharuddin’s mixed-media entitled Dari
Satu Keujudan (From One Existence) (1984), Bahaman Hashim’s emboss print Nusantara II (1984), Awang Damit Ahmad’s
Trajedi (Tragedy)1 (1985),
constructed painting of Romli Mahmud’s Akhirnya
ke Kamar Jua (To the Bedroom at last)(1986), a modular sculpture/installation
of Ramlan Abdullah entitled Bersatu Aman (Unity
Peace) (1986), Tengku Sabri Tengku Ibrahim’s experimental cast prints in
1986, Akif Emir’s mixed-media House to
Let, Rent Free Of Charge (1987), Zulkifli Yusof’s installation Tanpa Tajuk (Untitled) (1988), and Dari Hitam ke Putih (From Black to White) (1989),
Zainon Abdullah’s installation Makanan (Food)
Series I,II,III (1988), Tumian Jasman’s blown up pepsi cans installation
called Kebudayaan (Culture) XVI (1989), Che Zulkarnain Abidin’s wire
mesh installation entitled Computer Brain
I,II,III (1989) nasi lemak’s installation of Din Omar’s Kepelbagaian (Diversity) (1990), Juhari
Said’s innovative woodcut prints Garden
in The Sky (1990) and Kilimanjaro in
Nagasaki (1991) and Azman Hilmi’s Simbol
Ekspressi Watak (Symbol Expression
Character) (1992).(57) As affirmed by artist Sharmiza Abu Hassan
(UiTM student from 1990-1994), these works are not conservative by any standard
(or in comparison to Bayu Utomo Radjikin’s ‘highly charged figurative works’ as
implied by Ahmad Mashadi). Some of
them were even given awards.
Another example
includes Hasnul J Saidon and Faizal Zulkifli’s foray into digital and video art
in the 1990s, which can be traced back to Ismail Zain’s Digital Collage and Kamarudzaman Md. Isa’s experiments with his Amiga computers. Ahmad Fuad’s witty
visual pun and play of semiotics in his recent Recollection of Long Lost Memories series (2008) can be traced back
to Ismail Zain’s drawing class. Ahmad Shukri Mohamed’s interest in employing
myriads of non-traditional media in his paintings such as Target Series Camouflage II (1994) can be traced back to Fauzan
Omar’s influence. This post-formalist exploration of non-traditional media in
paintings was also engaged by his students such as Fauzin Mustaffa and Mohd
Noor Mahmud and later carried by younger generation of UiTM graduates such as Mohd
Azhar Manan, Wan Jamarul Imran, Nur Hanim Khairuddin, Noor Azizan Rahman
Paiman, Rosli Zakaria, Sharmiza Abu Hassan, Suhaimi Tohid, Sabri Idrus, Hamidi
Hadi, Daud Abdul Rahim and Ahmad Zuraimi Abdul Rahim. Despite the notion that
‘art and education were petrifying under the National Cultural Policy and
purist interpretations in the name of Islam’, these graduates were able to
churn out (during and after UiTM) engaging and innovative works that are
certainly not ‘conservative’ or ‘petrified’ at all.
Another interest in
UiTM includes collaborative multi-arts projects that were organised to combine
fine art, music, theatre and design into experimental performances. Exhibition
openings were complimented by acoustic performances. Experimental events were
presented, such as Gempita, Ledak Lintar and Kom-X where fine art students co-mingled with students from other
departments to engage in cross-media or cross-discipline projects. Ahmad Shukri
Elias for example, created a series of triangular sculptures that were
presented in a form of installation as well as body and light performance
(performed by Zainal Alam Kadir, now a popular Astro personality) in 1986.
Several UiTM graduates
continued to engage in other forms of art, such as theater, music, film and
video projects with Centrestage Performing Arts under the tutelage of Normah
Nordin and Najib Nor. Echoes of such interest in experimental cross-disciplinary
projects and narrative impulse can be traced in the profiles of artists such as
Ahmad Shukri Elias, Hasnul J Saidon, Ahmad Fuad Osman, Bayu Utomo Radjikin,
Hamir Shoib, Masnoor Ramli Mahmud, Nur Hanim Khairuddin, and Kamal Sabran.
Not all Malay Malaysian
artists today who received their initial exposure and formal training from UiTM
during the 1980s were conservatives or subscribed to the so-called ‘Malay
revivalist proclivities’. Even if they did, it was geographically and
culturally inherent and inscribed by their upbringing, more than ‘by
politicized, ideological considerations rooted in the new post-Cultural
Congress governmental policies’. Malay-ness, as with Chinese-ness or
Indian-ness or Iban-ness, will persist regardless of whatever economic and socio-cultural
policies a nation can come up with. In fact, the search for one’s ethnic root
and spiritual anchor is a common theme amongst artists all over the world. It
has to be respected, if not encouraged.
Unfortunately, such narrow
framing of UiTM and its students in the late 1980s may undermine (hopefully not
on purpose) their role and position in churning out new trajectories for the
contemporary art practice in Malaysia
after 1990. If there was a discouragement towards the use of figure, or
enforcement to conform to Malay-Islamic decorative impulse in UiTM, it was
probably out of individual dogmatic interpretation, jealousy and personality
clashes, which were prevalent in UiTM, as in other institutions.
UiTM itself (not just
the fine art department), as with other institutions, has had its own fair
share of other issues and inter-personal problems in the late 1980s and early
1990s. Overt conservatism and dogmatic interpretation of Islam did appear and
manifest in several forms, but certainly not to a point of generalizing ‘many artists
affiliated to UiTM’ as conservatives. The notion of ‘Islamization’ in UiTM itself
was not highly singular, but involved many different interpretations. In fact,
hegemony of any form in the arts, will normally invite counter-reaction or
rejection. Then again, even the notions of conservatism, Malay-ness and Islamization
(that celebrates diversity) should not be equated with anything of less quality
or negative. They should be noted and respected.
Jailani Abu Hassan
for example, states:
“That’s the most
intimate thing you do, it’s not pretentious, it’s what you are, it’s what
you’re made of, its where you come from, that’s the cultural, identity thing.
But I’m not trying to portray the Malaysian Identity, I’m not trying to answer
to the National Cultural Congress.”(58)
Jailani’s repertoire
of paintings and drawings for examples, despite their cosmopolitan stance and
urban feel, deeply reflect his socio-cultural and ethnic upbringing. Bomoh Hujan (Rainmaker) (2004) and Panglima Lubalang Daik (2006) are two
examples of Jailani’s penchant in expressively using his formalistic virtuosity
to reflect upon his cultural upbringing.
Piyadasa’s take (and
its echoes) on Malay proclivities were probably framed by events that had more
bearing in the larger economic, educational, social and cultural repercussions
of May 13th. 1969, rather than what had actually transpired in UiTM
during the late 1980s. The scenario therefore, was painted with large and broad
strokes that might have sidelined ‘other’ smaller but yet, important stories.
In fact, some of them were quite instrumental in opening a path for new ways of
making and looking at contemporary art practice in Malaysia after 1990.
Along the line of
providing the ‘other’ stories about UiTM during the late 1980s, it is highlypertinent
to also unveil obscured narratives or stories that had transpired at another
important art school in Malaysia,
the Malaysian Institute of Art or MIA. MIA, in comparison to UiTM, may perhaps
be taken as the ‘epicenter’ of Chinese proclivities – a kind of structuralist’s
binary pairing that was instrumental in providing the basis of new impulses for
contemporary art in Malaysia
after 1990.
Nevertheless, it is also pertinent
for any potential researcher and writer to be equipped with first hand primary
data, other than being fluent in Chinese language (Cantonese, Mandarin,
Hokkien), in order to make substantial claims or construct a credible narrative
about MIA during the late 1980s. This essay is admittedly lacking in this
aspect, which hopefully will be complimented by future research by other
credible candidates.
It has to be noted
that both UiTM and MIA should not just be taken as merely the epicenters of ethnic-based
proclivities, but also the epicenters of other proclivities that were
instrumental in driving the contemporary art practice during the early 1990s. Instead
of employing a binary pairing, both may
be taken as the repositories of perhaps many more smaller but intertwined
stories or narratives that may have been obscured by the dominant master narrative
of Malaysian art. Other than deconstructing certain ‘myths’ and stereotypical
framework, these smaller stories may provide more examples of early responses
of UiTM and MIA-linked artists to the emerging postmodern conditions brought
about by globalization, free market capitalism and information and
communication technology.
What about the Malaysian Institute of Art
(MIA)?
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