ProfileFavorites
Cart
The Artling Logo

OvermanBy Zelin Seah

Favorite
Find Similar

Loading

US$ 15,500


Overview

2020

Oil Paint, Oil and aerosol spray on linen

Unique Work

Dimensions: 200cm (H) x 180cm (W) / 78.7" (H) x 70.9" (W)

Note: Actual colours may vary due to photography & computer settings.


Shipping

This item ships from Singapore

Please note that this item is unframed and requires crating for shipment


In partnership with

Logo of gallery Richard Koh Fine Art

Buy With Confidence
Info

Collect from reputable artists and galleries

Ships securely to your door

Certificates of Authenticity with each artwork


Artist Statement

There is a flat and concealed world: the skimmed walls, the flat screens, and the expressionless faces. Underneath this seamless nature, there are many that we hide, such as pipes and wires, and emotions. The works of Zelin Seah from recent years address similar issues on the spiritual void that derive from digitalization. In The Two-Dimensional Man, Seah attempts to reinterpret the aesthetics of ancient relief by exploring knife-carving techniques on the surface of the paintings. He sees it as an act of mining out the possible meaning from the void. 

Seah constantly finds himself confined in the limited space of modernity and the recent periods of lockdown have exacerbated this condition. The Two-Dimensional Man is a metaphor he borrowed from the ‘lying flat’ movement initiated by the younger generation in China - suggesting a new attitude towards life: lying flat, turning to slow life, leaving room for thoughts, and corresponding to the scientific progressive social pressure. As a response, this series hints at the artist’s will to ‘stay flat’ in the over-progressive modernity.

 



Artist Profile

Born: 1980
Hometown: Malaysia
Based in: Kuala Lumpur

Zelin Seah (b.1980, Malaysia) lives and works in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. He received BFA at University of Central England (2007). Zelin’s semi- abstract depiction offering a
destruction aesthetic of everyday scenes. His uses of deconstruction treatments with brush making rejected the often deceptive appearances of everyday life, suggesting an inner space …

 

Visit Artist Profile Page

Back to Top