• Gajah Gallery Presents A Group Exhibition: 30 Years of Gajah: Many Horizons, One Sky

    Gajah Gallery Presents A Group Exhibition: 30 Years of Gajah: Many Horizons, One Sky

    Installation view of Many Horizons, One Sky

    Yogyakarta, 1 June 2026 — In conjunction with ARTJOG, Gajah Gallery marks its 30th anniversary with Many Horizons, One Sky, a group exhibition at Gajah Gallery Yogyakarta from 18 June to 19 July 2026. The exhibition features artists associated with the gallery’s three-decade commitment to promoting Southeast Asian art, highlighting diverse practices across painting, sculpture, and expanded material approaches. Spanning multiple generations and geographies, the presentation reflects the diversity of contemporary artistic production across Southeast Asia and beyond. 

    Many Horizons, One Sky assembles a multigenerational dialogue between practices that have shaped, and continue to reshape, the region’s contemporary art landscape. The paintings and soft sculptures by I Gusti Ayu Kadek Murniasih are marked radical visual language that emerged through a fearless commitment to self-expression. Similarly, sharp social critique runs through the legacy of Semsar Siahaan, whose work was deeply intertwined with the socio-political upheavals of his time. Reflections on human existence in contemporary life are depicted in the works of Ugo Untoro, while Handiwirman Saputra finds beauty within everyday objects. Presented for the first time, Yunizar’s new work draws from everyday experience, distilling figures and objects into evocative forms guided by intuition and rasa

    Installation view of Many Horizons, One Sky

    Further expanding the exhibition are works by a younger generation of artists that extend these explorations through distinct approaches. Rosit Mulyadi employs appropriation as a means of socio-political critique, while Ridho Rizki incorporates elements of pointillism and impressionistic techniques within still-life compositions. Kayleigh Goh explores urban materiality and affect through cement and gesso, and Jemana Murti engages questions of technology and traditions through 3D-printed forms. Alongside Dini Nur Aghnia, Satya Cipta, and Fika Ria Santika, these practices articulate a field of contemporary production shaped by experimentation, material inquiry, and shifting visual conditions across Southeast Asia. 

    The exhibition also features a series of works produced by Yogya Art Lab (YAL), the gallery’s foundry arm that serves as a site of experimentation, research, and exchange between artists and local artisans. Through this platform, diverse artistic approaches are translated into three-dimensional form: from the intimate gestures found in the works of Benedicto “BenCab” Cabrera and the social sensitivity embedded in Charlie Co’s practice, to Han Sai Por’s poetic visualisations of nature. Equally evident are Jigger Cruz’s engagement with ideas of surface and defacement, Jane Lee’s investigations into the boundaries of materials, Ashley Bickerton’s reflection on humanity’s relationship with the natural world, and Wei Ligang’s response to his time in Yogyakarta. 

    Installation view of Many Horizons, One Sky

    Venue

    Gajah Gallery Yogyakarta, Jalan Bugisan Selatan, Komplek Pertokoan Aruna, Keloran Bantul Yogyakarta 55182, Indonesia

    Artists

    Ashley Bickerton, Benedicto “BenCab” Cabrera, Charlie Co, Dini Nur Aghnia, Fika Ria Santika, Handiwirman Saputra, Han Sai Por, I Gusti Ayu Kadek Murniasih, Jane Lee, Jemana Murti, Jigger Cruz, Kayleigh Goh, Ridho Rizki, Rosit Mulyadi, Satya Cipta, Semsar Siahaan, Ugo Untoro, Wei Ligang, Yunizar 

    Exhibition Dates

    18 June – 19 July 2026

    Gallery Hours

    Monday – Friday | 10 AM – 5 PM, Saturday | 10 AM – 1 PM

    Website

    https://gajahgallery.com/

    Instagram

    https://www.instagram.com/gajahgallery

    Contact

    art@gajahgallery.com

    About Gajah Gallery

    Founded in 1996, Gajah Gallery has developed a sustained, critically engaged commitment to Southeast Asian contemporary art, shaped through long-term collaboration with artists and the region’s leading academics and art historians. Operating across Singapore, Jakarta, Yogyakarta, and Manila, the gallery presents a rigorous year-round exhibition programme and maintains a strong presence across major regional and international platforms. Its activities extend to long-term research and scholarly engagement, as well as supporting the production of extensive printed publications on seminal artists and collectives, contributing to the scholarship and historiography of Southeast Asian art. 

    About Yogya Art Lab

    Co-founded by Gajah Gallery Director Jasdeep Sandhu and Indonesian artist Yunizar, Yogya Art Lab (YAL) was established to provide artists with a dedicated space to experiment with new mediums and to ensure access to high-quality materials. Over the years, YAL has evolved into a world-class foundry and production house, enabling artists to realise new dimensions in their practice. 

    (Text and images courtesy of Gajah Gallery)


  • Gajah Gallery Presents Group Exhibition: Plots of Perception

    Gajah Gallery Presents Group Exhibition: Plots of Perception

    Erizal As, Untitled, 2023, 78.5 x 99 cm, framed 91 x 111.5 x 8 cm, Courtesy of Gajah Gallery

    Gajah Gallery returns to Art Jakarta Gardens 2026 with Plots of Perception, a presentation that mirrors the rich and multivaried nature of Southeast Asian art. Spanning a selection of seventeen cross-generational artists, the exhibit highlights reality as truth in flux, mapping personal memory and cultural contexts to form subjective realities.

    Delving into Balinese heritage are pioneering figures Made Wianta and Dewa Putu Mokoh. Opening up a more personal and playful chapter of Balinese art, Mokoh departs from the intricacies of the Pengosekan style by utilising clean lines and soft hues to usher characters from folklore into a playful, contemporary light. Similarly, Made Wianta stands both as a custodian of tradition and a relentless innovator — reconfiguring Balinese cosmology through calligraphic rhythm, bold colours, and geometric forms.

    Across the booth and sculptural garden, Yunizar’s inimitable and playful characters take charge. His works straddle the line between the natural and the fantastical, reflecting the artist’s ever-expanding imagination and celebration of the everyday. In contrast, Rosit Mulyadi’s expressive figurative works recontextualise paintings and iconography from Old Masters and pop culture to confront the socio-political realities of today.

    Charging the presentation with their boundless explorations of colour are Erizal As and Ibrahim, who delve deep into their inner worlds to push the boundaries of abstract expressionism and give form to the inexplicable. In parallel are emerging artists Dini Nur Aghnia and Ridho Rizki, who offer alternative ways of seeing. Aghnia’s clay works evoke the fragmented nature of memory in depicting lush landscapes, while Rizki’s still-life paintings merge elements of Pointillism and Impressionism to emulate the way the human eye perceives form.

    Dini Nur Aghnia, Down the Road, 2021, Clay on Canvas, 63.5 x 120 cm, Courtesy of Gajah Gallery

    Eminent Filipino artists, Mark Justiniani and Kiri Dalena extend the interrogation of sight in their multi-layered works. Justiniani plays with perception through his signature use of mirrors, meticulously arranging them to create infinite reflections and illusions of endless space. In poignant dialogue, Dalena’s work addresses the sociopolitical dimensions of the gaze, amending colonial photographs cataloguing nude Tagalog women, invoking a powerful act of protection and agency.

    Complementing them are Indonesian artists Jemana Murti, Satya Cipta, and Singapore’s Loi Cai Xiang whose contemporary voices offer fresh perspectives and incisive critiques. Merging sacred symbology with artificial intelligence, Murti’s sculptural works visualise the intersection of tradition and modernity as they reflect on the religious and cultural landscapes of Bali. In contrast, Cipta’s soft yet subversive paintings center the female experience through fluid linework and surreal motifs, while Loi Cai Xiang masterfully utilises light and shadow in painting atmospheric works that capture moments of the day to day.

    With unconventional materiality, Kayleigh Goh and Dzikrah Afifah translate memory and experience into material explorations. Using wood, cement, and gesso, Goh puts together meditative works that touch upon the poetics and psychological depths of space. Meanwhile, Afifah’s evocative figurative sculptures capture the essence of identity, resilience, and the shared human experience.

    Plots of Perception reflects Gajah Gallery’s sustained commitment to the continued development of Southeast Asian art. The presentation will be on view at Tent B, Booth B2, from 5 – 10 May 2026 at Art Jakarta Gardens.

    Ridho Rizki, Untitled (F25A), 2025, Acrylic and Ink on 300gsm Cold Press Paper, 75 x 53 cm, Courtesy of Gajah Gallery

    Venue
    Art Jakarta Gardens 2026, Hutan Kota by Plataran, Jakarta

    Artists
    Dewa Putu Mokoh (ID) , Dini Nur Aghnia (ID) , Dzikra Afifah (ID) , Erizal As (ID)  , Fika Ria Santika (ID), Ibrahim (ID), I Made Djirna (ID) , Jemana Murti (ID) , Kayleigh Goh (MY), Kiri Dalena (PH) , Loi Cai Xiang (SG) , Made Wianta (ID) , Mark Justiniani (PH), Ridho Rizki (ID) , Rosit Mulyadi (ID) , Satya Cipta  (ID) , Yunizar (ID) 

    Exhibition Dates
    May 5 – May 10, 2026

    Opening Hours
    Weekdays | 1 PM – 9 PM
    Weekends | 11 AM – 9 PM

    Website
    http://www.gajahgallery.com/

    Instagram
    https://www.instagram.com/gajahgallery

    Contact
    art@gajahgallery.com

    (Text and images courtesy of Gajah Gallery)


  • Gajah Gallery Presents A Solo Exhibition by Dini Nur Aghnia: What Gathers, What Holds

    Gajah Gallery Presents A Solo Exhibition by Dini Nur Aghnia: What Gathers, What Holds

    Poster credit: Gajah Gallery

    Yogyakarta, 21 April 2026 – Indonesian artist Dini Nur Aghnia presents her latest solo exhibition, What Gathers, What Holds, at Gajah Gallery Yogyakarta, opening 25 April 2026, in close proximity to the commemoration of Kartini’s Day. The exhibition introduces a new body of work that approaches landscape through a materially-driven inquiry, combining clay, resin, and patchwork textiles into layered compositions that unfold across strata. Aghnia moves through fragments; landscape, no longer a totalised vista, becomes proximal—formations made through constant, accumulative change. 

    Presented within the cultural moment of Kartini’s Day, which honors the legacy of Raden Ajeng Kartini and her advocacy for Indonesian women’s agency and expression, Aghnia’s practice resonates through its material choices and processes. Stitching, long associated with domestic and female-centered labor, is here rearticulated as both method and language. Through patchwork, she does not merely assemble fragments but asserts a form of authorship—one that remains attentive to care, repetition, and continuity while still insisting on new ways of seeing and constructing landscape. 

    Luminous Shore, 2025, Resin Beads on Canvas Board, 80 x 100 cm, Courtesy of Gajah Gallery

    Unlike traditions of Landscape painting in Indonesian art history, such as Mooi Indie, where nature was often aestheticised through a colonial optic, Aghnia’s work proposes an alternative reading that gives rise to new ideas of Landscape. The landscape here is not external to its subject, rather emerging through relation: between body and environment, memory and material, perception and lived experience. What is seen is inseparable from how it is held.

    Her works refuse composition; they accumulate. Coordinates of clay and resin are assembled with near-pixelated precision, while fragments of fabric are stitched and reconfigured using patchwork. At a distance, these surfaces cohere into images of mountains, seas, or forests; in proximity, they disperse into discrete yet interdependent elements. Representation gives way to relation where landscape is produced through encounter, not depiction. Embedded within these works are traces of the artist’s personal experiences. Clay is pressed, fabric is stitched—gestures that register as both repetitive and restorative. Memory does not resolve into image; it accumulates like sediment into form. Each work becomes a site where time is neither fixed nor linear, but layered and felt. 

    Untitled, 2024, Patchwork Quilting, 102 x 87 cm, Courtesy of Gajah Gallery

    The title, What Gathers, What Holds, reflects an ongoing process of collecting and sustaining temporal fragments. Small objects are encased in resin, preserved and suspended; textiles are pieced together in gestures that suggest care and continuation. Here, holding is both a physical act and a conceptual proposition: a way of attending to what might otherwise remain dispersed or unarticulated. 

    Resisting the fixity of photorealism, Aghnia draws the viewer into an unstable realm—where Landscape is not fully graspable, but continuously forming. Viewed in this context, What Gathers, What Holds situates her practice within a broader contemporary discourse on relational materiality, while also opening a subtle dialogue with histories of women’s labor and expression in Indonesia, marking a significant contribution to evolving conversations around Southeast Asian art. 

    The exhibition opens to the public on 25 April and runs until 24 May 2026 at Gajah Gallery Yogyakarta. Members of the media are welcome to join us for the opening reception on 25 April 2026 at 6:00 PM.

    Venue
    Jl. Keloran No.Rt 004, Senggotan, Tirtonirmolo, Kec. Kasihan, Kabupaten Bantul, Daerah Istimewa Yogyakarta 55184, Indonesia

    Artists
    Dini Nur Aghnia

    Exhibition Dates
    25 April – 24 May 2026

    Gallery Hours
    Monday – Friday | 11 AM – 7 PM
    Saturday, Sunday, Public Holiday | 12 AM – 6 PM

    Website
    http://www.gajahgallery.com/

    Instagram
    https://www.instagram.com/gajahgallery

    Contact
    art@gajahgallery.com

    About Gajah Gallery

    Founded in 1996, Gajah Gallery has developed a sustained, critically engaged commitment to Southeast Asian contemporary art, shaped through long-term collaboration with artists and the region’s leading academics and art historians. Operating across Singapore, Jakarta, Yogyakarta, and Manila, the gallery presents a rigorous year-round exhibition programme and maintains a strong presence across major regional and international platforms. Its activities extend to long-term research and scholarly engagement, as well as supporting the production of extensive printed publications on seminal artists and collectives, contributing to the scholarship and historiography of Southeast Asian art.

    (Text and images courtesy of Gajah Gallery)


  • Gajah Gallery Presents Suzann Victor’s City Lantern at Art Basel Hong Kong 2026

    Gajah Gallery Presents Suzann Victor’s City Lantern at Art Basel Hong Kong 2026

    A colorful and intricately designed art installation titled 'City Lantern' by Suzann Victor, featuring a circular structure made of reflective materials and illuminated from within, displayed at Art Basel Hong Kong.
    Poster credit: Gajah Gallery

    Gajah Gallery is proud to present Suzann Victor’s monumental kinetic installation City Lantern at Art Basel Hong Kong 2026. The work will be shown at Booth EN12, Level 3 as part of Encounters, the sector dedicated to large-scale installations, sculptures, and performances. City Lantern is a reflection on Asia’s evolving urban landscapes, pairing colonial-era photographs with contemporary images into a panoramic, rotating cityscape. Through its field of Fresnel lenses, the region’s histories fracture and recombine — buildings, bodies, and landscapes surfacing and dissolving in shifting constellations.

    A large, circular chandelier made of clear, reflective materials, suspended in a gallery space. The chandelier features colorful, abstract patterns that resemble a landscape, with hues of blue, yellow, and green visible through the reflective surfaces.
    City Lantern, 2025, (Installation View)

    At once luminous and disorienting, City Lantern is a 3.6-metre-wide kinetic installation in which a ten-meter photographic mural rotates slowly behind a ring of Fresnel lenses. The composition weaves together approximately sixty architectural sites from across the region, such as the General Post Office, Freemasons Hall, and Tian Tan Buddha in Hong Kong; Binondo Church and shanty houses in Manila; Tiger Pagoda in Taiwan; Temple of Heaven in Beijing; Golden Mile Complex and Roxy Theatre in Singapore, among others. This pictorial narrative maps a visual geography shaped by empire, migration, and aspirations to modernity, where buildings act as palimpsests, bearing the legacies of war, conflict, and the often invisible histories of women.

    An abstract close-up image featuring reflective, circular shapes in various shades of blue, silver, and gold, creating a mesmerizing pattern that hints at water and light reflections.
    Detail view of Suzann Victor’s City Lantern (2025)

    First presented in her 2025 solo show A Thousand Histories at Gajah Gallery Singapore, City Lantern expands upon Victor’s Lens Paintings and Lens-Sculptures body of works, confronting colonial-era photographic and post-card imagery to reclaim space for obscured histories of women and migration. Most of the images refracted through the lenses are drawn from colonial-era photographic records of Southeast Asia, dating to the turn of the 20th century. Comprising studio portraits and postcards — popular forms of visual culture at the time — these photographs reflect racial and social hierarchies that shaped perceptions of the region through a colonial lens.

    By bringing City Lantern into the global stage of Encounters at Art Basel Hong Kong, Victor expands the work’s frame of reference. In this context, the lantern becomes more than an optical device: it is a space of encounter where audiences navigate histories of visibility and invisibility, of colonial image-making and its undoing. The very act of seeing is unsettled, made contingent on the viewer’s movement. From one perspective, the panorama might read as a continuous cinematic scroll; from another, it might fracture into a surface of unstable, shifting images. Larger lenses trace the panorama’s clockwise rotation while smaller ones generate counter-rotations, conjuring the uncanny sensation of two directions at once.

    Three people engaging in conversation at an art gallery, with an abstract installation in the foreground.
    Suzann Victor with guests

    Victor has long defied disciplinary boundaries. From her historic participation at the 6th Havana Biennale—the first time the biennale included an Asian section—to being the first woman artist to represent Singapore at the Venice Biennale in 2001, she has consistently probed the poetics and politics of visibility. Through collaborations with Yogya Art Lab (YAL), Gajah Gallery’s production arm in Yogyakarta, Indonesia, she has expanded her lens sculptures to an architectural scale. Her lens-based explorations also include Sea Lantern II (2025), a commissioned work currently on view at the Art Gallery of New South Wales in Australia, and Third World Extra Virgin Dreams (1997), first shown at the 1997 Havana Biennale and now in the collection of the Singapore Art Museum.

    Visitors admiring a large, reflective art installation with colorful and distorted images, set in a contemporary gallery.
    City Lanten with Guest

    On the stage of Encounters, City Lantern is presented as a luminous, disorienting archive that transforms colonial images into a kinetic ocean of vision. It asks us to reconsider what it means to look, to remember, and to orient ourselves amidst fractured yet interwoven worlds. In the words of writer Anca Rujoiu, “As in Victor’s other kinetic sculptures, the unmooring perception stems not from engineering complexity but from the quiet force of fundamental optical physics. No single image can be fully seen, consumed, or possessed. There is no fixed vantage point. There is no totalising gaze. The image remains in perpetual motion; it refuses to yield clarity or closure.”

    Address
    Booth EN12, Level 3, Convention & Exhibition Centre, Wan Chai, Hong Kong, China

    Artist
    Suzann Victor

    Exhibition Dates
    March 27 – 29, 2026

    Website
    https://gajahgallery.com/

    Instagram
    https://www.instagram.com/gajahgallery/

    Contact
    art@gajahgallery.com

    About the artist

    A person with long, wavy brown hair wearing glasses, gazing thoughtfully against a sparkling background.
    Image Credits to Gajah Gallery

    Suzann Victor (b. 1959, Singapore)
    Suzann Victor is a Singapore-born, Sydney-based contemporary artist known for prospecting the contours of human sensorial experience, perception and phenomena. Her works activate materials derived from the body, the physics of light, water, sound and lenses, in conjunction with engineered components and the readymade. Through intimate performances, large-scale installations, public artworks and collective labour, Victor creates immersive environments that draw awareness to the viewer’s own body as an investigative tool for apprehending the world at large.

    The first female artist to represent Singapore at its inaugural showing in the 49th Venice Biennale (2001), she is the concept-developer of 5th Passage, Singapore’s first corporate-sponsored female-artist-run space that set the precedent of reaching out to the public long before “outreach” became a mainstay of local art institutions to come. A leading figure in Singapore’s contemporary art ecology, Victor’s socio-political works are recognised for their critical engagement with the colonial aftermath in Southeast Asia, the politics of female disembodiment and the inversion of the abject.

    On environmental concerns, her meteorological installation at the 4th Singapore Biennale employed green technology to produce objectless art – optically conjured with the eye – by inducing natural rainbow arcs to appear within the museum’s rotunda. Its methodological precursor, the Rich Manoeuvre iterations, presented a mid-air calligraphy of twelve live ephemeral drawings rendered by moving lights from swaying chandelier-pendulums – a signature kinetic series whose ocular nature captivated audiences physiologically and psychologically at multiple international venues. This conflation of dynamic image, sumptuous materiality, movement, and multi-tiered concepts epitomises Victor’s oeuvre.

    Victor’s works have been commissioned for presentation beyond Venice in notable exhibitions including the 6th Havana Biennale, 2nd Asia-Pacific Triennial of Contemporary Art, the 6th Gwangju Biennale, and the 4th Singapore Biennale. As part of the Sunshower Exhibition (Tokyo, 2017), she was invited by the Fukuoka Asian Art Museum for a special artist residency to create a cultural response to the city. Her iconic performance, Still Waters 1998, was honoured 21 years later as the theme of the M1 Singapore Fringe Festival in 2019.

    She received her MA and BA (First Class Honours) and completed her doctorate in 2009 at the University of Western Sydney, supported by the Australian Postgraduate Award and the UWS Top Up Award. Victor’s works reside in public and private collections worldwide.

    About Gajah Gallery

    Founded in 1996, Gajah Gallery has developed a sustained, critically engaged commitment to Southeast Asian contemporary art, shaped through long-term collaboration with artists and the region’s leading academics and art historians. Operating across Singapore, Jakarta, Yogyakarta, and Manila, the gallery presents a rigorous year-round exhibition programme and maintains a strong presence across major regional and international platforms. Its activities extend to long-term research and scholarly engagement, as well as supporting the production of extensive printed publications on seminal artists and collectives, contributing to the scholarship and historiography of Southeast Asian art.

    About Yogya Art Lab

    Co-founded by Gajah Gallery Director Jasdeep Sandhu and Indonesian artist Yunizar, Yogya Art Lab (YAL) was established to provide artists with a dedicated space to experiment with new mediums and to ensure access to high-quality materials. Over the years, YAL has evolved into a world-class foundry and production house, enabling artists to realise new dimensions in their practice.

    (Text and images courtesy of Gajah Gallery)