Agung Kurniawan |
* 1968 in Jember, East Java (ID), lives and works in Yogyakarta (ID)
During the 1990s, Agung Kurniawan’s works primarily addressed social and political issues, subtly criticizing the violence of the fascist Suharto regime in Indonesia. Following the introduction of democracy in 1998, Indonesian artists increasingly devoted themselves to political themes, while Kurniawan began to turn away from them. For him, the advent of democracy had divested political art of its significance as a medium of criticism and resistance. At this time the art boom in countries such as India and China was spilling over into Indonesia. Art dedicated to political issues commanded high prices on the international market. Souvernirs from the Third World, 1997–1999 |