Anne Samat
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An exuberant and precise sculptor, Anne Samat blends the aesthetic of international queer cultures - which she proudly represents as a transgender activist - with various textile and bricolage influences from South East Asia and beyond. She queers tradition with originality and confidence, creating figures that defy any fixed categories, be it of species, gender, or human versus sacred or fantastical figures. She navigates regimes of referentiality with grace and employs resources that range from drag queen ingeniousness to ancient Malay songket pageantry. Using intricately-woven textile, synthetic fibres, rattan sticks and other found objects, she creates colourful and elaborate totems inspired by ancient tales of her ancestry, evoking her familial lineage and the different cultures in Malaysia. She puts together found objects and elements with great intricacy, from indigenous natural materials to cheap industrial artefacts, creating striking totemic appearances that transcend time and geographies, but which nevertheless act as both metaphors for composite, intersectional, and empowered personal identities, as well as for the hybridity of Malaysian culture and its many influences and constitutive communities. In the face of increasing religious conservatism in the artist's native country, her works with their figuration, unabashed vanity, and references certainly gain an extravagantly subversive quality.
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An exuberant and precise sculptor, Anne Samat blends the aesthetic of international queer cultures – which she proudly represents as a transgender activist – with various textile and bricolage influences from South East Asia and beyond. She queers tradition with originality and confidence, creating figures that defy any fixed categories, be it of species, gender, or human versus sacred or fantastical figures. She navigates regimes of referentiality with grace and employs resources that range from drag queen ingeniousness to ancient Malay songket pageantry. Using intricately-woven textile, synthetic fibres, rattan sticks and other found objects, she creates colourful and elaborate totems inspired by ancient tales of her ancestry, evoking her familial lineage and the different cultures in Malaysia. She puts together found objects and elements with great intricacy, from indigenous natural materials to cheap industrial artefacts, creating striking totemic appearances that transcend time and geographies, but which nevertheless act as both metaphors for composite, intersectional, and empowered personal identities, as well as for the hybridity of Malaysian culture and its many influences and constitutive communities. In the face of increasing religious conservatism in the artist’s native country, her works with their figuration, unabashed vanity, and references certainly gain an extravagantly subversive quality.