ALL IS PRETTIER. PART III: STRIKE

Artist(s)

Udomsak Krisanamis

Curator

Chomwan Weeraworawit

"For it's one, two, three strikes, you're out, At the old ball game."

-Take Me Out the Ball Game

100 Tonson Foundation is pleased to present STRIKE, Part III of ALL IS PRETTIER. by Udomsak Krisanamis at the Foundation.

 

For the third and final part of Udomsak Krisanamis’ three-part project at 100 Tonson Foundation, STRIKE brings seemingly disparate, unconnected strands and narratives together in one space. STRIKE is like a compilation record of greatest hits, united not by theme but by the fact that there are the greatest hits. It is the final act, the last supper, the crescendo just before the end of a sonata when tension escalates to a shrilling height, and then all is silent. What started off as speed and acceleration to arrive, finding a warm and unexpected community speaking about everything and nothing all at once is to reach this moment.  STRIKE compiles Krisanamis’ paintings over the last decades, from the small feelings to the magnum opus, from the drawings to the noodle collages, from the crates to the canvases. Appropriation, simulacra, abstraction, reduction, assemblage, and invitation, a convergence of movements, forms, and references coming together in a glorious dance. What makes the greatest hits and lands them in the Hall of Fame? It is perhaps not just the soul of the music but it is the listener who decides. In that compilation, we can sing along to every song just as in STRIKE we can see and feel the artist’s greatest hits, thus far. Lightning doesn’t only strike once, but many times, in this room, a conversation is ignited about the past, the present, and the future but only he hears the music as he continues to paint.

 

STRIKE will be on view until November 19th, 2023.

 

Please be invited to the Opening Party which will be a ping pong tournament, a screen-printing workshop and golf-ball painting invitation on Sunday 8th from 1 PM – 6 PM.






UDOMSAK KRISANAMIS
ALL IS PRETTIER.


22.06.2023 - 19.11.2023


Curated by Chomwan Weeraworawit

PART I: SPEED
22.06.2023 - 19.08.2023

PART II: ARRIVAL
24.08.2023 - 01.10.2023

PART III: STRIKE

05.10.2023 - 19.11.2023

Whilst preparing for the exhibition, Udomsak Krisanamis was reminded of a quote by Andy Warhol, ‘All is pretty’ and was drawn to its simple truth. ‘All is pretty’ means that everything, as ordinary or unloved as it may be, has inherent beauty. For over three decades, Krisanamis has taken the most ordinary, unloved objects and surfaces and made them “prettier”. That all things have the capacity to be pretty suggests there is nothing that cannot become an artist’s canvas: there is nothing so ordinary that it cannot be art.

Over six months, and in three parts, Krisanamis will transform 100 Tonson Foundation into a factory inspired by Warhol’s own such space: a place for imagination, experimentation, and boundless creation for both the artist and his community. Krisanamis’ rendition of the Factory will pay homage to Warhol’s: a living space that morphs into various incarnations throughout its three-phase evolutionary existence. The room will become the artist’s studio, where the public is invited to observe, listen, or read, and ultimately serve as a factory for making memories. After all, everything is prettier when it has the care and attention of a community.

ALL IS PRETTIER. by Udomsak Krisanamis is curated by Chomwan Weeraworawit.

The exhibition will be on view at 100 Tonson Foundation from 22 June 2023 – 19 November 2023 and will be divided into three parts with each part having its own public programming and activities.

About the artist



Udomsak Krisanamis
Born 1966, Bangkok Thailand.
Lives in Chiang Mai

Udomsak Krisanamis has been a prominent figure in the Thai and international contemporary art scene for over three decades. After completing a Bachelor of Education program in Art education at Chulalongkorn University, Krisanamis enrolled at Pratt University in Brooklyn, New York before completing his MFA in Painting at The School Of The Art Institute Of Chicago. Krisanamis returned to New York to found a practice that championed objet trouvés, creating a distinct collage technique using materials as diverse as newsprint and noodles, and painting on surfaces that were not the typical artist’s canvas. Krisanamis’ earlier works comprise of densely-layered grids and experimentation with texture, depicting what could be abstract cityscapes, starscapes, and even digital-scapes; whereas, his more recent works express bold and conceptual statements, expanding to include bright monochrome colours with striking patterns, while continuing to incorporate unconventional “found objects” such as straw and yoga mats, egg cartons and paper packaging, and ping pong tables into immersive installations. This incorporation of daily life, one could even say celebration of everyday objects and rituals, into his multi-disciplinary practice defines both an aesthetic and a narrative that is intrinsically personal and uniquely his own.


Selected solo exhibitions include a retrospective Re-Presentation: Redux (Bangkok University Gallery, 2019); Retrospective curated by Rirkrit Tiravanija (CMU Art Center, Chiangmai, 2016); Planet Caravan (Lehmann Maupin, Hong Kong, 2014); Udomsak Krisanamis (Gavin Brown’s Enterprise, New York, NY, 2012); a mindful mission (Galeria Giti Nourbakhsch, Berlin, and Kunstverein Freiberg, 2011); and Udomsak Krisanamis (Kunsthalle Basel, 2003). His works have been included in group exhibitions including SUNSHOWER: Contemporary Art from Southeast Asia (Mori Art Museum, Tokyo, 2017); Art and Music-Search for New Synesthesia (Museum Of Tokyo, 2012); Dereconstruction (Gladstone Gallery, New York, NY 2006); Bidibidobidiboo, curated by Francesco Bonami (Colllezione Sandretto Re Rebaudengo, Turin, 2005); Greater New York (P.S.1, Long Island City, NY 2000); Examining Pictures (Whitechapel Art Gallery, London, 1999); 11th Sydney Biennale (1998); and Project 63 (Museum of Modern Art, New York, NY, 1998). His works are found in the collections of the Museum of Modern Art, San Francisco; Walker Art Center, Minneapolis, MN; Albright Knox Art Gallery, New York; Cartier Foundation, Paris; and Fondazione Sandretto Rebaudengo, Turin, Italy, among others.

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