Banksy- art makes you think

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AndyKK
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Re: Banksy- art makes you think

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Artist’s unique technique is cut above the ordinary

Born and raised in Seattle, American artist Lauren Iida has been living in the Kingdom off and on for the past 13 years and making significant contributions to Cambodia’s contemporary arts scene, which includes founding the artist’s collective Open Studio Cambodia – an organisation that helps mentor and support local artists – in 2018.

As an artist, Iida is known for her intricate paper cutaways like her 10m- long Memory Nets, which consists of white paper silhouettes of objects that Iida says symbolise the hope, strength and resistance of her subjects.

Iida says she’s been making art for as long as she can remember, starting with her very earliest childhood memories of drawing and painting. She studied art at Cornish College of the Arts in Seattle and graduated in 2014.

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AndyKK
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Re: Banksy- art makes you think

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Borey Chankiri art exhibition features talented local group

he rattan-like woven vine quality of Kvay Samnang’s deer, peacock and cow – now on display at Borey Chankiri by Urbanland – make the sculptures seem organic but the copper metal they are cast from gives them a definite permanence and presence in the room that impresses.

Samnang joins 11 other well-known Cambodian artists in showcasing their work at leading real estate developer Urbanland’s A Space In Between exhibition, which begins on June 12 at its sales offices in Borey Chankiri off of National Road 2.

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AndyKK
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Re: Banksy- art makes you think

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Exhibition of contemporary Apsara paintings now open

Nineteen pieces of contemporary paintings by talented local artist Teang Borin, who focuses on the hand and foot movements of traditional Khmer Apsara dancers, are to be exhibited at the gallery of the Sofitel Phnom Penh Phokeethra hotel.

Having started on May 15, the exhibition is to run for three months until the end of July.

Borin said his work had received greater interest from local audiences over the Covid-19 pandemic, with a number of them having been purchased.

The collection of paintings in the form of Apsara dance and royal dances in a variety of styles, such as Tep Apsara and the Royal Ballet, have been kept by Borin – known as Din – for the exhibition after the two years of the Covid-19 crisis.

The 40-year-old Cambodian – who has become known as the “Apsara dance painting artist” for his highly creative and lively paintings – is currently committing all his time on painting for sale instead of utilising the skills he learned at architecture school.

“I have 19 paintings for this exhibition. There are two types, including 12 large and small contemporary paintings of Apsara dance and royal dances, and seven abstract paintings.

“I have been saving all of the works I made over the more than two years of the Covid-19 crisis. I have had only one opportunity to exhibit them, at the Rosewood Hotel Gallery in 2020,” he said.

While in the past, around 70 per cent of his paintings were bought by foreigners, over the past two to three years, the momentum of support for his artwork has changed, he said.

“During the Covid-19 crisis, I could see that interest mostly came from Cambodians, with Khmer people it seems seeking more understanding about art and strongly supporting local artists.

“During this period, foreign art lovers seem to have had less interest in paintings embedded in the Khmer character, so my contemporary paintings are proving more popular among wealthy Cambodian clients than foreigners.

“Foreign clients can find it difficult to bring large paintings back to display at their house in their home country, with unfavourable travel conditions due to the pandemic,” Borin said.

Borin’s smallest Apsara Dance and Royal Dance paintings – 30x30cm – cost $75, while the largest – 1.6 x 2.5m – go for $5,000 per piece.

Born into a Kampot family, Borin has two sisters. After completing high school in Kampot, he pursued a bachelor’s degree in architecture at Norton University in Phnom Penh in 2001, graduating in 2005. He started his career as an architect at Yianko Associates from 2008 to 2014.

Borin said that one aspect of being an architect that he missed was working as part of a team on a project, which could take months or even years to complete, while artists work alone.

And this was one of the reasons that he decided to start his own company in 2015, he said, which he called DinArt Gallery.

Borin’s Apsara Dance paintings have proven so popular that one was purchased by Professor Roux Francois Xavier to present to King Norodom Sihamoni in 2020.

“DinArt is very honoured and thankful to professor Roux Francois Xavier for purchasing a DinArt painting for King Norodom Sihamoni,” Borin said in a Facebook post in July 2020.

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