Paradigm of Abstract Expressionism Painting
of Balinese Artists in Yogyakarta
I Gede Arya Sucitra, Retno Purwandari and Kadek Primayudi
Institut Seni Indonesia (ISI) Yogyakarta, Visual Arts Faculty, Jl. Parangtritis Km. 6,5, Sewon, Bantul
Departement of Visual Art, Department of Craft, Department of Communication Visual Design, ISI Yogyakarta
Keywords: Paradigm of Art, Abstract Expressionism, Aesthetics, Balinese Art.
Abstract: Art discourse in Indonesia has discussed the need for Indonesian concepts, paradigms, and categories both in
historical studies, aesthetic theories and general cultural strategies. With various kinds of cultural
achievements and works of art produced by Indonesian artists. This research departs from observations of
certain styles that have developed communally in the field of Indonesian art, especially Yogyakarta, which
later became an art development identity in the 1990s, namely abstract expressionism style. In this study will
deeply read and trace the achievements of the "art paradigm" and the development of expressionism abstract
paintings, especially in Sanggar Dewata Indonesia (SDI) artists in Yogyakarta which reached its golden age
in the span of 1990-2000.
The focus of Balinese artists who became the object of this research was Made Wianta, Nyoman Erawan, and
Made Sumadiyasa. The birth of abstract expressionism paintings that are faithfully carried as the language of
representation of a number of Balinese artists who are the subject of study in this study shows that the
problems of form, pattern, and method of work are only as visual intermediaries in realizing their deepest
imagination of cultural and personal experiences.
1 INTRODUCTION
There was something interesting that was conveyed
by the Art Observer, Academician A.A.M. Djelantik
about "Balinese identity" in the development of
Balinese art in the 1990s at an exhibition of paintings
by seven painters of the Indonesian Goddess namely
Made Djirna, Nyoman Erawan, Made Budhiana, and
several others at the Ubud Bali Neka Museum. In this
exhibition, several artists such as Made Djirna,
Nyoman Erawan, Made Budhiana have developed
abstract expressionism style/patterns. Of course, this
creativity is relatively new between the bustling
decorative markets, Balinese traditions and
surrealistic styles that developed in the 70-80s era.
This kind of exhibition will invite many questions
that arise in the hearts of the attendees, such as:
Where do you return to this work? Can this still be
displayed as Balinese art? Is it the appearance of the
Balinese theme, can the paintings be classified for
Balinese painting? Which can be called Indonesian
national art? Perhaps many question marks will still
be waving in front of you, which cannot yet be
answered "(Djelantik, 1990).
The mental burden and creativity of Balinese
artists who migrated to Yogyakarta armed with
traditional Balinese capital, when they found a
different atmosphere from the perspective of art in
Bali. The clash of understanding of this language
arouses the thought process and personal perspective
of artists from Bali in "seeing the spirit of Bali".
One understanding that is often emphasized by
the predecessor of SDI, one of them is I Nyoman
Gunarsa, which is in creativity in processing shapes,
colors, fields, what and so on, the 'image of Bali' still
emanates from it. The supporting generations of the
Dewata Studio come and go. Following in the
footsteps of his predecessors without releasing his
identity, the nest of the Dewata Studio hatched new
figures who immediately became calculated figures
such as Nyoman Frawan, Made Budhiana, Made
Djirna, Nengah Nuratha, Bendi Yudha, and Made
Rutha.
The spirit of building newness, especially in the
visual translation of works of art, led Balinese artists
who at that time were still struggling through art
education to obtain more cultural capital provided and
now available in the vicinity. The Balinese-Javanese
Sucitra, I., Purwandari, R. and Primayudi, K.
Paradigm of Abstract Expressionism Painting of Balinese Artists in Yogyakarta.
DOI: 10.5220/0008557001770185
In Proceedings of the 1st International Conference on Interdisciplinary Arts and Humanities (ICONARTIES 2019), pages 177-185
ISBN: 978-989-758-450-3
Copyright
c
2020 by SCITEPRESS Science and Technology Publications, Lda. All rights reserved
177
cultural spirit provides a broad and deep cross-section
to expand creative ideas. The fact that the output of
creation is strongly influenced by the surrounding
environment and what artists consume intellectually,
as stated by M. Dwi Marianto (Marianto, 1997), "So
what is important to note in seeing what is presented
is to question also about dreams what dreams,
obsessions, and concerns are contained in the works
on display. Because both direct and indirect works of
art always reflect the situation and conditions in
which the artist lives, because idioms and metaphors
used in language and especially in the art are always
shaped by the surrounding environment.
The artwork is a product of a culture where the
artists are born and work. There is always a
connection between the lives of artists and the
behavior of the local culture that gave birth to it
(Saidi, 2008). Indonesian culture is a compound
condition because it capitalizes on various cultures in
the region that develop according to the demands of
its own history. Experience and the ability of these
regions provide answers to each of the challenges that
give shape, shape, and culture. Also, the socialization
process which was later developed within the
framework of each culture gave color to the
personalities that emerged from the cultural
environment (Kayam, 1981).
Art discourse in Indonesia has discussed many of
the needs of Indonesian concepts, paradigms, and
categories both in the study of history, aesthetic
theory, and general cultural strategies. With a variety
of cultural achievements and works of art produced
by Indonesian artists, there is a tendency to hurry to
talk about what kind of paradigm should be used in
mapping the aesthetics that underlie the work. And
usually, the Indonesian traditional treasures are dug
up, then put in place as a "paradigm" that is "typical
of Indonesia". In this framework, there is a
preoccupation and like finding a "national aesthetic"
framework whose elements are said to be found in the
"peaks" of all ethnic traditions in Indonesia
(Sugiharto, 2003).
But since then abstract painting, which has always
been debated as a graft of Western art, has become a
discourse in the history of the development of
Indonesian art. The building of this discourse is as if
the abstract painting of Bandung apart from the
discourse of modern Indonesian art. Jim Supangkat
writes that the issue of Bandung abstract painting is a
view that is rarely discussed in official discourse,
although it is often debated in the context of the
discourse of modern art. This view places the
development of Indonesian modern art based on
modern art theory which is commonly applied
throughout the world, which is the paradigm of
international art. This modern art theory is rooted in
the art of post-modernism, namely the concept of
post-modern art that was confirmed in European
culture - America after World War II. Konsepsi ini
percaya pada totalitas universialisme. The concept of
modernism which is the cornerstone of
postmodernism in Indonesia is undeniable, formed
based on the paradigm of Western culture, which its
application outside the Western world, feels forced
(Nurjaman, 2010). This conception places abstract
painting as a milestone in the development of modern
Indonesian painting. This placement map is based on
the fact that abstract painting offers a whole new
concept and aesthetic values when compared to
Indonesian art in a figurative context, which has been
known since prehistoric times as symbolic art.
This article departs from observing the
achievements of certain styles that have developed
communally in the Indonesian art scene, especially
Yogyakarta, which later became the identity of the
development of art in the era of the 1990s namely
abstract expressionism style painting developed and
popularized by Balinese artists Sanggar Dewata
Indonesia. The development of the art world in
Yogyakarta, especially the artists who received art
education at the ISI Yogyakarta Faculty of Art, is
certainly not sterile from the influence of art theory,
alluding to works of art from various parts of the
world to the traditional communal values. In this
study, I will deeply read and trace the achievements
of the "art paradigm" and the development of abstract
expressionism, especially in the artists of the
Indonesian Dewata (SDI) in Yogyakarta, which
reached its golden age in the 1990-2000 range.
These works are driven by artists from the
Indonesian Dewata (SDI), which for the past forty
years towards the end of the second millennium gave
color to art. The aspects of Balinese locality that
present cultural identity appears to be evident in the
Balinese contemporary artists' works. Their work
presents Bali in a new 'style'. The style is certainly
different from the achievement of I Gusti Nyoman
Lempad and friends when developing the Pita Maha
stream. Artwork is a cultural representation of the
community. In other words, "style" is also the cultural
identity of the communal society. In this regard Polly
Wiessner explained, that style is a formal variation in
the material culture which contains information about
personal and social identity. Personal identity in
question is that each member of the community has
their own way of expressing their cultural identity
more as individual expression.
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178
The character of the artists of the city of
Yogyakarta, as expressed by Made Bakti Wiyasa
(Sucitra, 2013), is considered to be able to live the
spirit of Balinese artists who study at ISI Yogyakarta
with Balinese culture as a Mother and inspiration
spring, who are also experiencing revitalization with
the spirit of the era passionate, amid anxiety about the
threat of cultural alienation because it pre-assumes
that modernization is westernization which is
considered the same as uniformity of taste and
decadence.
For this reason, young Balinese artists are aware
of the challenges faced; that those who inherit local
cultural traditions resulting from centuries of
acculturation with culture from outside, experience
contact with new ideas that are not in the traditional
culture. In line with this, Sucitra (2014) views
Yogyakarta as a creative home for art learning space,
as well as educating their mentality, providing rapid
and challenging growth in artistic processes.
Yogyakarta is also a place for the confrontation
between tradition and renewal.
Culture formed by humans, and that is the result
of the human perception of the world. This mindset is
a pattern because of the pattern of cultural patterns.
The best way to communicate with the public about
the world, and perceptions that are easy to do through
thinking about humans every day, as a tangible
manifestation of their perceptions. (Liliweri, 2002)
borrow the words of Joseph Levenson, the study of
humans who think, ....in the experiences of
individuals and individual groups of individuals,
under the direction of symbols, they capture, feel,
reason, value, and carry out (Geertz, 2004).
Artists as the main actors in the creation of works
of art, certainly have their own way of looking at
translating various influences around them. The
resulting artwork also has a distinctive personality
value and contains various links to elements of
universality and local cultural values. This issue is the
focus of this study, which raises the research question
1). What is the understanding of the art paradigm in
the creation of abstract expressionism of SDI artists
in Yogyakarta, 2). What is the form of visual
expression of abstract expressionism of SDI artists in
Yogyakarta. Starting from the problems stated above,
it aims to describe the concepts and thoughts that
developed in the creation of abstract expressionism
paintings on SDI artists in Yogyakarta. And know the
aesthetic/creative achievements and recognize the
visual tendency of abstract expressionism paintings
created by SDI artists.
2 STUDY OF LITERATURE
This study uses a multidisciplinary approach. But the
main focus is using an anthropological approach with
a theory developed by Thomas Kuhn, namely the
paradigm as a scalpel in interpreting the substance of
this research. According to Kuhn, paradigms are large
theories in which there are smaller theories.
Theoretical perspective, cosmology or paradigm
defines the main issues that researchers think
(Saifuddin, 2006). But in the development related to
the subject of research as an enriching part of the
paradigm's perspective, of course, other scientific
involvements such as history and aesthetics are used.
There are several general views regarding flow,
models, theoretical systems, theoretical orientations
regarding paradigms. In Kunh terms are called
paradigm orientations. Following Pelto (1984), a
paradigm orientation includes Saifuddin, 2006: 31):
a. The conceptual area where discipline is
considered work;
b. Methodology, including research design,
verification criteria, preferred techniques, and
assumptions regarding the balance of "art" and
"science";
c. Implied philosophy of the perpetrator: is it free
or bound, rational or emotional, good or bad.
In his famous book and is still often used as a
reference by scientists, namely The Structure of
Scientific Revolution (1972), Thomas Kuhn uses the
term "paradigm" in two different dimensions: "first,
the paradigm means the whole device - Kuhn calls it"
constellation "- beliefs, values, techniques, and so on
that are shared with members of a society. Second,
the paradigm means certain elements in the device,
namely ways of solving a puzzle, which is used as a
model or example, which can replace other models or
ways as a basis for solving puzzles in normal science
(Saifuddin, 2006).
To support the in-depth discussion of paradigm
theory, the author also uses an aesthetic theory of
abstract expressionism in one of the legendary art
books namely Concerning The Spiritual In Art
compiled by Wassily Kandinsky in 1911. In theory,
he built to mark and dissect abstract works
expressionism namely impression, improvisation,
and composition. Here's the statement Kandinsky
describes: (1) A direct impression of outward nature,
expressed in purely artistic form. This I call an
"Impression."
(2) A largely unconscious, spontaneous
expression of inner character, the non-material
nature. This I call an "Improvisation."
Paradigm of Abstract Expressionism Painting of Balinese Artists in Yogyakarta
179
(3) An expression of a slowly formed inner
feeling, which comes to utterance only after long
maturing. This I call a "Composition." In this, reason,
consciousness, purpose, play an overwhelming part.
But of the calculation nothing appears, only the
feeling. Which kind of construction, whether
conscious or unconscious, really underlies my work,
the patient reader will readily understand (Kandinsky,
2008:117).
3 DISCUSSION
3.1 Interpretation of the Abstraction
Paradigm
The focus of Balinese artists who are the object of this
research is Made Wianta, Nyoman Erawan, and Made
Sumadiyasa. The three Balinese artists consistently
and continuously manage the creation of works in the
abstract breath. Made Wianta represents Balinese
artists who studied at STSRI ASRI Yogyakarta in the
70s, Nyoman Erawan in the 80s and Made
Sumadiyasa who was the youngest after STSRI ASRI
became ISI Yogyakarta representing young artists in
the 90s. Of course, the analysis of the visual paradigm
remains their work performance in the era of the 90s
when abstract expressionism reached its heyday.
There is an interesting statement Dewa Gede Purwita
in the Nyoman Erawan Catalog book titled
COSMOLOGY RITUS: Rima Nyoman Erawan
Motif In the Cosmic Mandala, as follows, the
universal abstract form that is invisible in the socio-
cultural Balinese society is always present as a source
of interest in translating it into reality. This behavior
has always been the same as the reason for the
creation of mystical beings such as Gajah Mina,
Rangda, Barong, Fire, Wind, and so on. Reflections
on the abstracting activity are clearly seen from how
Balinese humans have the greatness in imagining and
realizing their attraction from the intangible abstract
nature to reality (Purwita, 2015).
In line with this, M. Dwi Marianto once stated
about Bali's human (artist) reflection ability in
manifesting itself through spiritual abilities that
became material towards newness. "... presumably,
the members of the Sanggar Dewata have come to
explore again by kapujanggan/brahmana art that
prioritizes spirit and the process of giving birth to a
work of art (fully felt), and sees the practice of art as
a puja - offering to God - through art. Hopefully this
is not only good as a counterweight to life that is now
flooded with products of modern culture, instant
cultural products, and the chaotic uncertainty due to
cultural changes that are too instant, but more
important is the realization that ideas for all creation
of works of art there is only in the dialectical space
between the spiritual and the material. It was there
that there were the spirits of beauty, the lokananta
title, the characters, threads of ideas, and waves of art
which were sensitive to musicians/dancers/ or painter,
materialized and recycled as a work of art. Without
willingness and sensitivity to see the spiritual, if art is
too small to accommodate anything new and
refreshing "(Marianto, 1997).
Abstraction in fine art indeed the problem lies in
the problem of visual form. The term abstraction is
used in this paper to represent the meaning: the
process of extracting forms from sensory captured
phenomena into something that is a clump of ideas
which after being influenced by the process of
personal mental abilities becomes an artistic idea that
is ready to manifest in the form of later painting
works. Because of the many influential factors that
play a role, the idea in its embodiment becomes a
visual language that is multi-value and if drawn on
the problem of form, the result of the painting is
abstract figurative.
The process of abstraction of painters continues to
develop in line with the development of world art
which increasingly ignores thematic principles in
conventional painting, and prioritizes experiments to
get new discoveries in art. Indeed, in the history of the
birth of art, especially in the West, as a reference in
the development of art in Indonesia, it has not run
smoothly but is full of a series of revolutionary events
until the present styles. In line with this, Bambang
Sugiharto (Sugiharto, 2003), said that even in the
field of art, the history of the development of art in
the West, for example, always tends to be seen as a
series of chronicles characterized by revolutionary
ruptures which are usually associated with events -
decisive socio-political events such as: Middle Ages,
Renaissance, Baroque, Romantic, Modern,
Contemporary, and so on; or associated with
fundamental changes in the field of "style" (style,
schools) such as: Naturalism, Impressionism,
Expressionism, Abstract Expressionism, and so on.
And this pattern of understanding history
immediately becomes a standard pattern used in
various places. "Style" (flow or style) and socio-
political conditions are seen as two keys to
understanding the "paradigm" of art.
The implication of this is that the notion of 'art'
itself inevitably follows the pattern of Western
understanding as well. Like science, as if the
definition of art must be universal, and that means the
definition of Western-style art is the benchmark.
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180
The term 'abstract' in art is a rather loose term for
naming works of art that do not have clear subjects
(in the purest sense are works of art which consist of
lines, shapes, and colors which are completely free
from the illusion of forms in nature), as well as art
that if there is a subject, it has experienced distortion,
simplification, and advanced enrichment. And more
generally, abstract art is an art in which the natural
forms (if any) no longer function as objects/themes
that must be brought but live as motives, as an excuse
to make things rather than make nothing.
The abstract term first appeared in the talk of art
marking one of the schools/movements in the
mainstream of modern western art in the early 20th
century. Wassily Kandinsky (1866-1944) was
considered a pioneer in that. Wassily Kandinsky, in
his theory Concerning the Spiritual in Art (1910)
expressed the existence of three sources of inspiration
for the birth of abstract painting. The first impression
is a direct impression of everything that exists outside
the artist, human, universe, objects and so on. Second,
improvisation is a spontaneous expression that is not
realized. Here inspiration arises in a person and is
spiritual. The three compositions, expressions of
feeling, are formed consciously, even though they
remain in irrational or logical levels. Slow
expressions will be arranged in harmony, thus
forming a composition that is pleasing to the eye.
Abstraction is a term used not as tightly as in talks
about modern paintings and sculptures such as
cubism or futurism. All art without a subject that can
be recognized is called abstract, but also art that has a
subject but has experienced distortion, simplification,
or enrichment on a certain level. The word is often
used by artists themselves to describe a quality of the
artwork is a work of art that is formative and pay more
attention to how a work of art is delivered or
manifested rather than what the work is (Mayers,
1985).
Abstract definition according to the Indonesian
National Encyclopedia (1990) reads: Abstraction
(from the Latin word 'Ab', meaning from and
'Trahere', interesting), is a process of separating
certain aspects of the object as a whole and focusing
only on one aspect among the aspects that exist. This
process produces a general and universal
understanding. According to Aristotle this process of
abstraction occurs at the ratio of humans which
releases something from the five sensory ingredients
presented to it. There are three types of abstraction,
namely material abstraction, mathematical
abstraction, and non-material abstraction.
3.2 Interpretation of Abstract
Expressionism's Work
To make it easier to understand and explore the space
of creative thinking and the aesthetic paradigm of the
three abstract artists of Balinese expressionism, the
authors of the analysis will be based on the personal
spaces of their journey and the work they created in
the 1990s.
1. Made Wianta
Figure 1: Irama Bersambung, 1990, 150 x 290 cm, oil paint
on canvas.
Balinese artists born in 1949 in the village of
Apuan, Tabanan Bali who had received STSRI ASRI
fine arts education from 1970-1974 did indeed have a
unique and sometimes controversial process of
creative processes, especially relating to their
freedom of viewing a tradition and the ideal of
creating art. Wianta is an intellectually free human
being who is interested in ideas, but he opposes any
theoretical/ideological constraints or limitations. The
key for Wianta as a human being is freedom is not
constrained by expression and the search for the
connotation of the essence of things.
He passively sees the essence of ideas and objects
and actively creates them in paintings and objects.
Louis Fichner in Understanding Art (1995) states that
abstract art is a simplification or distortion of forms.
Only in the form of the essence of the natural form or
object abstracted. Abstraction, significantly changes
objects, so that they become their essence. Wianta is
a person who is free and has a strong personality, he
is not afraid to act in his own name and for himself.
He knows that he has something to say in
words/imagination, and he expresses it. His character
is hard-hearted, active, creative, and forward-looking.
He does not separate the past but the future. He
desires to change the rules; his paintings are visual
impressions. His freedom to have social, intellectual,
as well as artistic implications.
Free in the way of view, Wianta is thus free as an
artist (painter). Again, what's important to him is
creativity. The title of one of his articles in the Bali
Post (January 27, 1981) expresses this: "artistic
creativity is absolute but the creation of this work is
not always of quality". In other words, the process is
more important than the results of the process. The
Paradigm of Abstract Expressionism Painting of Balinese Artists in Yogyakarta
181
creative process is a good work prerequisite
(Heryanto, 1994).
Enjoying abstract paintings can be done by
looking at the harmony of the composition of visual
elements. Visual elements in the form of composition,
color, lines, and texture of the painting, create certain
impressions and messages. Everyone has the right to
interpret abstract paintings according to the
background of his experience because painting is a
visual sign of multiple interpretations. Abstract
painting was created through the process of changing
or simplifying forms into geometric or biomorphic
forms. It can also be created in expressive form. In
abstract paintings, visual elements are arranged in
such a way that they convey certain messages or
impressions. These visual elements have symbolic
characters and meanings. The character and symbolic
meaning of visual elements can imply certain
meanings desired by painters. In an interview with the
author with Made Wianta about the style of his
paintings which always experience the process of
metamorphosis and are not standardized in the same
motion. He emphasized the power of creative work
that continues until later it will find the artist's
personality.
The creative process and work patterns of Wianta
are very much in line with what turned out to be the
idea of Kandinsky, in terms of producing works,
whose colors, the composition of space, lines and
points and their rhythms are created as a result of his
freedom of spiritual exploration.
The pouring of Wianta's abstract vision on canvas
invites us to a psychological contemplation. Even so,
the abstract and modern vision of Wianta is not
without concepts or limitations. He gave new
movements and nuances to the shapes and colors that
he had inherited from the old tradition. Wianta's
artwork is still rooted in Balinese art. In the Executive
magazine article (1990) Wianta said, "For me the
world is abstract. Is there an object or not, for me the
same. Life is only a matter of time. I am well aware
that space and time are always changing. Even though
the sun rises in the East, it sets in the West, but nature
changes every time. "
2. Nyoman Erawan
Figure 2: Pralayamatra XXXXIV, 1997, 105 x 135 cm, oil
paint on canvas.
Nyoman Erawan is one of the Balinese artists who
has cross-media and cross-disciplinary talents, an
interest in the creation of art that is not only in
painting but also in installation, sculpture,
performance art, and poetry. An artist born in 1958,
Sukawati Gianyar, Bali has such complex creativity
and studies the anxiety of creativity that is so
profound and total. In a long stretch of creativity,
perhaps almost all areas of art and cross-art have been
traced to the vortex of its creative constellation. He
has become accustomed to articulation both in terms
of medium, technique, and subject matter, especially
in his artworks that unfold exploration of abstraction.
His creativity was so solemn in the concept
centered on the cosmological circulation of Balinese
Hindu philosophy, always giving him a space of
creativity that never vanished. Moving on to the thesis
that abstract art and ornaments are in the awareness
of flatness, Nyoman Erawan's abstraction is just the
opposite, that is, rejecting flatness. From the
beginning, his work had a strong awareness of space.
About this matter, Wayan Seriyoga Parta said that the
space for Erawan and most of Bali's abstract artists
have never been limited to the dimensions of the
medium of work, space is an integral part of
cosmology ”(Parta, 2015).
In such a long span of time, Erawan's existence
stretched across cross-medium crosses with creative
energy that exploded and continued to flow. So if we
"re-unpack" the travel file of the art of Erawan's
painting, we will meet with a stretch of traces of
creative behavior, starting from the strong use of
symbols that are closely related to Balinese cultural
traditions. Referring to Erawan's work in the 80s, the
theme of the Balinese tradition of spirituality became
his way of expressing the relationship between human
cosmology and the universe. One of them is in the
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182
concept of destruction, in Hinduism in Tri Murti's
cosmology in the power of Shiva.
Pralaya is seen as the final stage of the procession
of life, the stage towards nir, emptiness which
actually has spaces with visible talk energy. Through
his study of the Ngaben procession, Erawan began
with a visual struggle which then continued on his
rites. The accumulation of interest in physical
elements from the remnants of Ngaben has
implications for the visual variety that is present
adorning the fields of the canvas. Exploration of
various possibilities produces a variety of lines,
coarse and fine nicks, brush strokes, splashes,
textures and the use of primary colors often accent in
abstract paintings. Indeed, the abstract in Erawan's
work refers to abstracting, he processes form by
deconstructing it, revealing it and visualizing it in
such a way, vague, with a powerful new form.
Erawan starts with a visual struggle which then
continues on his rites. The accumulation of interest in
physical elements from the remnants of Ngaben has
implications for the visual variety that is present
adorning the fields of the canvas. Exploration of
various possibilities produces a variety of lines,
coarse and fine nicks, brush strokes, splashes,
textures and the use of primary colors often accent in
abstract paintings. Indeed, the abstract in Erawan's
work refers to abstracting, he processes form by
deconstructing it, revealing it and visualizing it in
such a way, vague, with a powerful new form.
Subject Matter by Nyoman Erawan's painting lies
in his form of abstraction in his work, the focus is on
the accumulation of various colors, incisions that
form barriers, expressive lines so as to form an object
that is represented in various forms and forms of
motives. In it will be found a variety of patterns of
dual matra, various lines in geometric form. Motives
that are present in both the subject matter and outside
can be said as verbal motives, in this context the
verbal motives are decorative ornaments which
appear in Nyoman Erawan's work. Verbal motives
that usually adorn Nyoman Erawan's work are stone
motifs, fire, leaves, padma, kembang bajra, feather
patterns (sometimes assembled to form wing-like
shapes), spiral lines, lines that form a checkered
pattern.
3. Made Sumadiyasa
Figure 3: Humanity I, 1994, 110 x 150 cm, oil paint on
canvas.
Made Sumadiyasa comes from a village that still
holds a strong tradition and is still filled with beautiful
rice fields and beautiful nature. Precisely he came
from the village of Selemadeg, Tabanan Bali. It was
during his education at ISI Yogyakarta that Made
gained the freedom to build his artistic adventure
where at that time the campus provided freedom of
creativity for students to find the best patterns,
creative methods to build art networks.
In the initial phase of work in 1992, his work
presented elements of figures/objects, especially
human formations. In this period, it was understood
that Made's creative process was still influenced by
strong formation studies as long as he studied
Balinese art which was thick with strong but
straightforward elements of the formation. His work
was inspired by Balinese cultural activities such as
humans to temples, dance moves, and gamelan. The
imagination of Bali is still attached to the
encouragement of the creation of works of art.
The next phase between 1993-1994, Made began
to choose symbols as the language of expression
which is sometimes vague toward abstract forms. By
presenting impression figures and symbol inserts, as
in the work of Humanity 1 (1994), the work seems to
begin to combine vague forms with strong lines and
color expressions. Identity is no longer easily
recognizable. Made has increasingly come to
recognize the spirit that is in him that no longer
depends on formal formations but goes a long way
into the problem of 'taste'. Each object has its own
emotional spirit and it must be recognized by the
depth of imagination. The expressive language in
Made's works is not just in forms or illusions in space.
It is in the level of emotion which can be understood
in the quality and intensity of feeling. Feeling is tied
to situations, so Made's emotions are important in
terms of the process which creates a feeling of
"ecstasy" in him: When I paint, the vibrations of
Paradigm of Abstract Expressionism Painting of Balinese Artists in Yogyakarta
183
colors are combined with the creative process
reflecting my emotions about the theme of the work,
and I became unaware of everything else and focused
on what I was imagining. This feeling gives me an
extraordinary sense of pleasure (Wisetrotomo,1998).
The work phase with a total abstract by
eliminating the elements of formation and symbolism
in mid-1994, as seen in the 1994 Spirit of the Forest
work, Made gained enlightenment to find the level of
pleasure with spontaneous movements and let the
freedom of his subconscious form his imagination.
Made gave his wildness to form a mysterious sweep,
which was filled with natural energy and spirituality.
4 CONCLUSIONS
Panorama of Indonesian art cannot be separated from
the origin of the artist and also his contact with the
surrounding environment which galvanizes the
thinking process and the method of creating it. This
research that desires to recognize the
paradigm/cosmology of thinking and creating
Balinese artists who are intensely engaged in work in
abstract expressionism style.
It is clear in the process of research that it seems
that the cosmology of the creation of artists' work
cannot be separated from the cultural capital and
knowledge they have, besides being related to spirit
and its ability in flexibility and awareness to be freed
from theoretical constraints. let go of theoretical
confinement. Like Wianta, for him to create art at first
it must have a strong, cultural foundation of
knowledge so that it can become a pillar of the spirit
that is invisible to be manifested spiritually in the
form of works of art. Freelance and non-fearsome
work on the results that will be obtained is the way
Wianta finds his union with the world 'taste'.
Paradigms that are not much different are also
explored by Nyoman Erawan and Made Sumadiyasa.
His introduction and intense contact with Balinese
traditional culture enriched his visual language, but
what was taken was his essence and local genius
symbols, so that his work could freely go in and talk
about and borrow Balinese labels in the process of
creating a symbolic Balinese taste or even very
absurd just lines, and colors.
The birth of abstract expressionism paintings that
are faithfully carried out as a representation language
of a number of Balinese artists who are the subjects
of this study indicates that the problem of forms,
patterns, and methods of work of work is only a visual
intermediary in realizing their deepest imagination of
cultural and personal experiences. In an abstract way,
their minds and creative processes become unfettered,
thus spirituality becomes more total finding spaces of
inspiration for other consciousnesses.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
This article is the result of research in the field of art
involving many parties. Therefore, on this occasion,
he expressed his gratitude to the head of the ISI
Yogyakarta research institute for providing research
opportunities and funding. Thank you to the reviewer;
Prof. Drs. M. Dwi Marianto, M.F.A., Ph.D. and Dr.
Timbul Raharjo, M.Hum., and the three Artists Made
Wianta, Nyoman Erawan and Made Sumadiyasa.
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