Araya Rasdjarmrearnsook


ABOUT THE ARTIST

Araya Rasdjarmrearnsook is one of Southeast Asia’s most respected and internationally active contemporary artists, and for over thirty years her video, installation, and graphic works have been regularly shown in museums and biennials around the world, including the Venice Biennale (2005), Documenta (2012), and a retrospective exhibition at the Sculpture Center in New York City (2015). The North Carolina Museum of Art will present a solo exhibition, Art in Translation: Araya Rasdjarmrearnsook, running from March 7 through July 26, 2020. A Novel in Necessity’s Rhythm, her fourth solo exhibition with Tyler Rollins Fine Art, began on February 13, 2020.

Born in Trad, Thailand, in 1957, Araya received fine art degrees from Silpakorn University in Bangkok in 1986 and from Hochschule für Bildende Künste Braunschweig in 1990 and 1994. Her etchings and aquatints of the late 1980s and early 1990s, with their ghost-like female figures in shadowy environments, set up themes – death, the body, and women’s experience – that would endure throughout her career. Feelings of loss and isolation, informed by the early death of her mother, and a heightened sensitivity to the strictures traditionally placed on women within Thai society, would increasingly find their expression in her work through the physicality of the body and the concreteness of sculptural installations, which by the early 1990s had become the primary focus of her work. Often incorporating semi-abstract, totemic female forms, natural materials, and haunting photographic imagery, all marked by a patina of age and wear, these installations confront us with the raw physicality of both life and death, charged with an almost animistic power that seems to channel powerful psychological states. These works were widely shown in such seminal exhibitions as the first Asia-Pacific Triennial in Brisbane, Australia (1993), and Traditions / Tensions: Contemporary Art in Asia, at Asia Society in New York (1996). Living with these often fragile, ephemeral sculptural works in her home, Araya began to examine more closely her relationship with “otherness,” with entities that were radically distinct from her, yet intimately linked by a commonality of experience, a participation in the basic cycles of nature, of life and death. By the late 1990s, this led her to bring rituals of the dead into her artistic practice, and to a shift to video work. In collaboration with the medical community, she began to film her own rituals for the dead at morgues, using corpses of individuals who died without family members to attend them. Incorporating her experience as a teacher (she remains an active member of an art school faculty), as well as her familiarity with Thai ritual practices, she created an extraordinary series of video works evoking the pedagogy of the classroom and the intimacy of private ceremonies, in which she attempts to connect the worlds of the living and the dead. The series was further developed in a residency at Artpace in San Antonio, Texas, in 1998, and had its culmination in a multi-channel video installation for the Thai Pavilion at the 2005 Venice Biennale. Videos such as The Class (2005) have since been widely exhibited at museums and biennials on four continents.

Video has remained the primary medium of Araya’s artistic practice to the present day. Still deeply informed by her earlier sculptural installation work, her videos are imbued with a strong physicality, with a close focus on bodies, often positioned in semi-abstract environments, their aura extending outward into the viewer’s own space. These videos typically imply the presence of an audience that is both observing the action and ceremonially participating in it. They reference traditions of village storytelling, which create continuities between the present and the past, the everyday world and the world of spirits and of legend. Her videos have a meditative, ritualistic quality, and, like many of humanity’s important rituals, they are often centered on the idea of communication between different realms: between the living and the dead, the insane and “normal” people, humans and animals, the worlds of art and “real life.” With her highly acclaimed series Two Planets (2008) and Village and Elsewhere (2011) – shown as part of her first New York solo exhibition in New York (Tyler Rollins Fine Art, 2012) – Araya focused on art itself and the way the viewer interacts with a work of art, placing framed reproductions of iconic Western paintings in rural villages, markets, and Buddhist temples in Thailand, where she filmed groups of farmers discussing the artworks. These videos create a meeting point between apparent oppositions: high art and everyday life; the personal and private spheres; elite and mass culture; art and commerce; East and West. While issues of class and cultural differences, exoticization of the “other,” etc., are invoked, these videos also convey a sense of curiosity, humor, and joy that emphasize a common humanity. 

Dogs have been a recurring motif in Araya’s work, and indeed dogs are a very important part of her life; she cares for dozens of abandoned, often injured dogs in and near her home in Chiang Mai, Thailand. In an ongoing series of videos and multi-media installations, she explores the interrelationship between humans and dogs, chronicling the daily routines of life, but also suggesting wider themes about overcoming the binarisms of self and object, life and death, human and animal. For her installation project presented at the 2012 edition of Documenta, videos of her interactions with her canine family were screened on the outside of a small cabin in a park, where she and her dog Ngab also lived together for a month. This intimate pairing of the artist’s own body with that of her dogs appears throughout her recent exhibition at the gallery, Niranam. While the Thai title can be translated as “nameless,” in fact the works are highly personal, often featuring images of the artist or the individual dogs she lives with, and are a meditation on ways that the self, one’s body and psyche, exists in a continuum with other living beings (including animals), all participating in the ongoing cycle of life and death. The title Niranam can thus suggest that by delving deep into one’s experience, one can attempt to get at something that is beyond the self, and to a kind of pure experience that transcends the particularities of one’s circumstances, the pain of suffering, and even the apparent finality of death.

Araya’s work has been featured in solo exhibitions in the United States at the Sculpture Center in New York (2015), the Denver Art Museum (2013), the Walters Art Gallery (2012), and the Bass Museum (2012). Her work is included in numerous museum collections, including: the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York; Asia Society, New York; Smith College Museum of Art; Orange County Museum of Art; National Museum, Osaka; Singapore Art Museum; Museum Arnhem, Netherlands; and Kiasma Museum of Contemporary Art, Helsinki.

Hyperallergic, Carnal Humans and Bookish Animals Cohabitate in a Sprawling Video Installation

July, 2017


VIEW ARTICLE →

VIEW ARTICLE AT SOURCE →


The New York Times, What to See in New York Art Galleries This Week

July, 2017


VIEW ARTICLE →

VIEW ARTICLE AT SOURCE →


Galerie, 12 Exhibitions To See in New York This Summer

June, 2017


VIEW ARTICLE →

VIEW ARTICLE AT SOURCE →


Art Radar, “Jaonua: The Nothingness & Sanook Dee Museum”

June, 2017


VIEW ARTICLE →

VIEW ARTICLE AT SOURCE →


4Columns, Araya Rasdjarmrearnsook

June, 2017


VIEW ARTICLE →

VIEW ARTICLE AT SOURCE →


Artnews, 9 Art Events to Attend in New York City This Week

May, 2017


VIEW ARTICLE →

VIEW ARTICLE AT SOURCE →


An Atlas of Mirrors An Endless of Beginnings

February, 2017


VIEW ARTICLE →


Bangkok Post, Where time and space cease to exist

November, 2016


VIEW ARTICLE →

VIEW ARTICLE AT SOURCE →


Asia Society, In & Out of Context

March, 2016


VIEW ARTICLE →

VIEW ARTICLE AT SOURCE →


The Guardian, The best American art shows of 2015

December, 2015


VIEW ARTICLE →

VIEW ARTICLE AT SOURCE →


ARTnews, Araya Rasdjarmrearnsook at SculptureCenter and Tyler Rollins Fine Art

June, 2015


VIEW ARTICLE →

VIEW ARTICLE AT SOURCE →


Artforum, Araya Rasdjarmrearnsook at the SculptureCenter

May, 2015


VIEW ARTICLE →


Artillery, Araya Rasdjarmrearnsook at the SculptureCenter and Tyler Rollins Gallery

May, 2015


VIEW ARTICLE →

VIEW ARTICLE AT SOURCE →


Art in America, Araya Rasdjarmrearnsook at SculptureCenter

April, 2015


VIEW ARTICLE →

VIEW ARTICLE AT SOURCE →


The New York Times, SculptureCenter: ‘Araya Rasdjarmrearnsook’

February, 2015


VIEW ARTICLE →


ARTnews, 9 Art Events to Attend in New York City this Week

February, 2015


VIEW ARTICLE →

VIEW ARTICLE AT SOURCE →


Bangkok Post, Confronting social taboos through art

February, 2015


VIEW ARTICLE →

VIEW ARTICLE AT SOURCE →


The New York Times, East and West Meet, Checking Norms at the Door

February, 2015


VIEW ARTICLE →

VIEW ARTICLE AT SOURCE →


The New Yorker, Araya Rasdjarmrearnsook

February, 2015


VIEW ARTICLE →

VIEW ARTICLE AT SOURCE →


Interview Magazine, The Artist, one of the Others

February, 2015


VIEW ARTICLE →

VIEW ARTICLE AT SOURCE →


Blouin Art Info, Cadavers, Canines, and Koons at the SculptureCenter

January, 2015


VIEW ARTICLE →

VIEW ARTICLE AT SOURCE →


Artspace, Araya Rasdjarmrearnsook on Lecturing the Dead, and the Art of the One-Sided Conversation

January, 2015


VIEW ARTICLE →

VIEW ARTICLE AT SOURCE →


Artforum, Araya Rasdjarmrearnsook at the SculptureCenter

January, 2015


VIEW ARTICLE →

VIEW ARTICLE AT SOURCE →


Blouin Art Info, Thai Artist Araya Rasdjarmrearnsook Emerges From the Shadows in Sydney

April, 2014


VIEW ARTICLE →

VIEW ARTICLE AT SOURCE →


Hofstra University Museum, Araya Rasdjarmrearnsook

2014


VIEW ARTICLE →


Artshub, Thai artist’s overdue moment in the Australian sun

2014


VIEW ARTICLE →

VIEW ARTICLE AT SOURCE →


Dirge: Reflections on (Life and) Death

2014


VIEW ARTICLE →


Artforum, 2013 California-Pacific Triennial

December, 2013


VIEW ARTICLE →


Blouin Art Info, The Guggenheim UBS MAP Global Art Initiative’s “No Country: Contemporary Art for South and Southeast Asia”

March, 2013


VIEW ARTICLE →


The Nation, A new country conquered

March, 2013


VIEW ARTICLE →

VIEW ARTICLE AT SOURCE →


The Miami Herald, At the Bass on Miami Beach, the Renaissance lives on

February, 2013


VIEW ARTICLE →

VIEW ARTICLE AT SOURCE →


The New York Times, Acquired Tastes of Asian Art

February, 2013


VIEW ARTICLE →

VIEW ARTICLE AT SOURCE →


Art Asia Pacific, Araya at Tyler Rollins Fine Art

February, 2013


VIEW ARTICLE →


Los Angeles Times, Orange County museum names 32 triennial artists from Seoul to San Francisco

January, 2013


VIEW ARTICLE →

VIEW ARTICLE AT SOURCE →


California-Pacific triennial, Araya Rasdjarmrearnsook

2013


VIEW ARTICLE →


Miami New Times – Art

December, 2012


VIEW ARTICLE →

VIEW ARTICLE AT SOURCE →


Forbes, Dispatches From Miami Beach: The Best Break From Basel

December, 2012


VIEW ARTICLE →

VIEW ARTICLE AT SOURCE →


Blouin Art Info, Miami’s Bass Museum Blows the Lid Off Tradition With “Endless Renaissance” Show

December, 2012


VIEW ARTICLE →

VIEW ARTICLE AT SOURCE →


Paper Magazine, The Mega Guide to Art Basel Miami Beach 2012: Wednesday

December, 2012


VIEW ARTICLE →

VIEW ARTICLE AT SOURCE →


The Art Newspaper, The Endless Renaissance

December, 2012


VIEW ARTICLE →


dOCUMENTA (13) The Guidebook, Araya Rasdjarmrearnsook

June, 2012


VIEW ARTICLE →


Artforum, Araya Rasdjarmrearnsook at Tyler Rollins Fine Art

May, 2012


VIEW ARTICLE →


Art in America – International Review, Araya Rasdjarmrearnsook at Tyler Rollins

May, 2012


VIEW ARTICLE →


The New York Times, Solo Show for Araya Rasdjarmrearnsook at Tyler Rollins

February, 2012


VIEW ARTICLE →

VIEW ARTICLE AT SOURCE →


Solo exhibition at the Walters Art Museum

2012


VIEW ARTICLE →


Kaza Ana / Air Hole: Another Form of Conceptualism from Asia

2011


VIEW ARTICLE →


Video, An Art, A History 1965-2010 catalogue

2011


VIEW ARTICLE →


17th Sydney Biennale

2010


VIEW ARTICLE →


Close Encounter exhibition catalogue

2010


VIEW ARTICLE →


Asian Art Now, Politics, Society and the State

2010


VIEW ARTICLE →


Art Asia Pacific, Dialogues With Difference

November, 2009


VIEW ARTICLE →


Thermocline of Art: New Asian Waves, Araya Rasdjarmrearnsook

June, 2007


VIEW ARTICLE →


Wind from the East exhibition catalogue, Araya Rasdjarmrearnsook

February, 2007


VIEW ARTICLE →


Art Signal, Confronting Confrontation: An Interview with Araya Rasdjarmrearnsook

2007


VIEW ARTICLE →


2006 Taipei Biennial, Araya Rasdjarmrearnsook

2006


VIEW ARTICLE →


51st Venice Biennale Catalogue, Araya Rasdjarmrearnsook

2005


VIEW ARTICLE →


10th Biennale of Sydney, essay by Lynne Cooke

1996


VIEW ARTICLE →


Traditions/Tensions: Contemporary Art in Asia, Araya Rasdjarmrearnsook

1996


VIEW ARTICLE →


Southeast Asian Art Today, Araya Rasdjarmrearnsook

February, 1996


VIEW ARTICLE →


54th Carnegie International

1994


VIEW ARTICLE →


Asia Pacific Triennial Catalogue

1993


VIEW ARTICLE →