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Phaptawan Suwannakudt's mural works
concern Buddhist narrative such as Buddha's life and Jataka, Buddha's
previous incarnation before his enlightenment. The figures and motifs
in the narratives also reflect Thai lifestyle and social activities.
"My work is a way of telling stories and
interpreting things I have experienced through the skill I learned
from my father. They are, most of the time, concerned with what
I have made of myself, including my childhood memories, Buddhism,
mythology, and Thai ways of life, beliefs, as well as my dreams
which have occupied me since the very earlliest stages of my life."
During the past eight years, while living in Australia, Phaptawan's
works have shifted in theme - relating more directly to herself
and reflecting her life in Australia as seen in The Elephant
and the Bush series.
The Elephant and the Bush series illustrates Phaptawans
responses to a new cultural and environmental context, though simultaneously
drawing from her mural temple training and its language. The series
was influenced by the artists recent four week residency at
the Bundanon Art Trust. Phaptawan speaks of an unfamiliarity with
the Australian landscape but this series displays a familiarity
and an ability to render the landscapes individuality and
its concurrent duality of openness and encasement. Closer observation
reveals a fusion of her two environs, as behind the imposing tree
trunks the background foliage and details follow traditional Thai
mural techniques. Additionally, the presence of elephants in this
series, as Phaptawan personally and culturally identifies with the
elephant, displays her growing recognition of being part of her
new environment. Phaptawan may interpret her new country primarily
through Thai eyes but increasingly this vision is layered in the
pluralities of home.
references: Christine Clark, 2003 <abstractions>
exhibition pamphlet, Australian National University.
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