VOYAGE
TROKOMOD


From the early beginning of his artistic engagement, Heri Dono has consistently aspired to set right what he thought was wrong. For Heri, art is not just about exploring the beauty or the aesthetic but to give awareness to the audience. “Artists have a moral responsibility to add to the global conversation, and inspire people with awareness of what is going on in their environment and in the world at large.” 

In the Indonesian Pavilion which is themed “Voyage”, Heri Dono presents his site-specific work, a fusion of the Trojan Horse and the Indonesian Komodo dragon (dubbed Trokomod), shaped as an amphibious hybrid “animal” of 7.5x3x3.5 meter. With this hybrid 'vehicle' which encompasses his entire world vision where East and West merge,  he explores the state of the world, at the same time exploring his place and the country's in the global constellation of nations.  “Indonesia has for most of the time been a blank spot on the world map, he asserts, now is the time to speak up'. With this he wants to show another way of asserting power.

While the appearance of Trokomod may be frightful, the interior presents a soft power using material like rattan, and a ceiling covered with a canvas on which batik symbols of all religions denote the wish for peaceful religious pluralism,  Trokomod's voyaging through history and plying the oceans between cultures is the culmination of his critical views about  global and local cultures, about political, geopolitical  and social situations at home and in the world, and about Western hegemonies that he used to reveal with a lot of humor and a touch of human benevolence. Trokomod, however has added an etchy touch.

An important part of the work is Heri Dono's ethnographic imaging. Contrary to a traditional display in an ethnographic museum which traditionally  displays exotic cultures from a Western point of gaze, Heri Dono switches roles showing Western icons as we perceive them from the other part of the world. This follows his belief that it's an artist's moral responsibility to inspire people with awareness of what is going on in the world and to balance the global conversation. ”

Within the 'animal's interior, visitors can peep through telescopes  to see artifacts and images of important cultural significance that is perceived to have  marked the Western world, and operate the periscope showing selected markers of Indonesian and Eastern significance.

Traditional vessels of the past that mutated in the course of time, are hanging above the hybrid animal  fusing memory of Indonesia's maritime position in the past  and a view for the future.

As a whole, Heri Dono wants to signify the past, the present and the unknown but hopeful future.



Carla Bianpoen


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