How Woodcut Carving Speaks Truth to Power
Krystie Ng, Curator
01-Dec-20 15:00
Embed Podcast
You can share this podcast by copying this HTML to your clipboard and pasting into your blog or web page.
Close
Woodcut carving and printmaking occupies an interesting space within visual arts, as it crosses the lines between the traditional and the modern, between folk art and contemporary art. A current exhibition called “Carving Reality” features works from Malaysia, Indonesia, East Timor, Hong Kong, Taiwan and Japan, and spotlights the emergence of social realist woodcuts in East Asia. We speak with the exhibition’s curator Krystie Ng about the movement’s history, and why woodcut carving is often a means of criticising imbalances of societal and political power.
Image Source: The Back Room
Produced by: Sharmilla Ganesan
Presented by: Sharmilla Ganesan
This and more than 60,000 other podcasts in your hand. Download the all new BFM mobile app.
Categories: Film, Visual Arts
Tags: The Bigger Picture, Front Row, Art, Contemporary Art, Visual Art, Asian Art, Woodcuts, Printmaking, Social Realist Art,