Archipelagic Juxtapositions

ruangrupa & Documenta15

ruangrupa (which loosely translates as ‘a space for art’) is an artist’s initiative and collective which started in Jakarta, Indonesia in 2000. As a contemporary art ecosystem, it seeks to analyse and mediate ideas of visual art, public art, performance art and video art, to allow visual art to possess a critical sensibility.

While ruangrupa consists of ten core members, its number of members is not fixed. It is also an interdisciplinary team, composed of architects and social scientists among others. As a contemporary art ecosystem, ruangrupa practices lumbung (meaning rice barn in Indonesian), where a common pool system is created and all resources—tangible and intangible—are collected and divided proportionally according to needs. This practice comes from their lifestyle orienting around the rice barn—a place that stores communally-produced rice as a common resource for future use. It also reflects lumbung’s openness, flexibility and responsiveness to surroundings, pointing to how they imagine their world to be. It is this do-it-yourself ethos and a lack of hierarchy that have shaped and sustained what ruangrupa is today.

ruangrupa’s artistic practices culminate in forms of art events and workshops, exhibitions, art writing and criticism workshops, festivals and even parties and karaokes. It functions as a contemporary hub and non-profit organisation, running a research archive, an art lab, radio station, a journal titled Karbon and a publishing arm. Some of their artistic practices and engagements include OK Video (2003-ongoing), a video art festival in collaboration with the Indonesian National Gallery to create an experimental platform for artists working with non-narrative video works and audio-visual language, and Decompression #10, an exhibition celebrating the collective’s 10th anniversary.

Curator David Teh described in Afterall journal in 2012 how ruangrupa’s ‘unruly aesthetic’ ranges from punk to street cultures, documentary, ethnographic research, as well as conceptual and process-oriented experiments. In addition to all these, ruangrupa also has networks of affiliations and collaborations across Indonesia and within Southeast Asia. One such collaboration is with two other art collectives based in Jakarta, namely Grafis Huru Hara, and Serrum, to establish GUDSKUL (pronounced ‘good school’), a public learning space established to practice collective values such as sharing, equality, solidarity and togetherness, which started in 2018.

In 2021, ruangrupa was appointed as curator by documenta 15’s Finding Committee consisting of renowned art experts, which was to take place from June to September 2022. This was seen as an important milestone, since no Asian curator had ever been appointed for documenta, a major contemporary art mega-exhibition held every five years in Kassel, Germany.

One of the reasons for ruangrupa’s selection was that documenta 15 was consciously seeking to give room to non-European views of artists and their practices. To the committee then, ruangrupa’s selection was appropriate, given how ruangrupa’s artistic practices and works showcased its home country, Indonesia, as well as its public sociopolitical problems. For ruangrupa, lumbung for document 15 also expanded alongside documenta’s motive of wanting to heal European war wounds, including those of today’s injuries rooted in colonialism, capitalism and patriarchal structures.

Unfortunately in the course of documenta 15, one of the artworks by an artist collective, Taring Padi, who collaborated with ruangrupa, was accused of containing offensive racial stereotypes. The artwork, People’s Justice, was subsequently dismantled as advised by documenta’s Supervisory Board, and accompanied with an apology by ruangrupa. At the same time, ruangrupa also sought to clarify that People’s Justice was an artwork collectively made in reference to Indonesia’s dark and unresolved political history. They also took the opportunity to mention how some of these accusations seemed to have been made in bad faith, without seeking to mutually engage and learn. However, problematic accusations continued to be levelled against ruangrupa, as they continued to face hostilities and threats, vandalism in some of documenta’s art spaces and a lack of support from documenta.

Much has already been discussed and written in relation to this controversy. However, another lamentable and unfortunate outcome was how this controversy ironically disrupted and short-circuited documenta’s hope of ‘decolonisation’—the giving of exposure to non-European views of artists and their practices, as well as dealing with issues rooted in colonialism, racial hierarchies, capitalism and extractive structures. It also meant a lost opportunity to delve deeper and learn more about ruangrupa’s curatorial practice and ethos of lumbung,  as well as from marginalised non-western artist collectives and their different art practices now gathered in one place over a period of time.

Along this vein with a focus on the arts ecosystem, this controversy more importantly also surfaced and highlighted tensions and differences between ruangrupa’s collaborative and open-ended artistic practices and documenta’s institutional, formal, bureaucratic and managerial approach, accompanied by typical expectations from the arts world on documenta’s mega-arts exhibition platform.

This is best summed up in ruangrupa member, farid rakun’s description of how documenta and ruangrupa ran on two different operating systems. While documenta’s art practices consisted of exhibition-making around object-based art, individual genius solo artists, or one curatorial voice from an individual artistic director, ruangrupa’s mindset was more long-term, and revolved around not merely exhibitions or what to make and show, but who they would have liked to work with, and practiced collaborations with artist collectives, working towards network structures with minimal hierarchies and open-ended learning experiences.

This is not to say that ruangrupa is against art objects, nor denying their own western art education which has also colonised their minds. Rather, against the context of documenta’s style as a mega-exhibition structure, ruangrupa wanted to ask if exhibition-thinking could go beyond itself, by bringing in different contexts, and thinking about art ecosystem’s movements alongside the logic of resources in art practices beyond documenta.

At the same time, the meeting of two different operating systems of ruangrupa and documenta also beg the important question—to what kind of public/s and visitors did they envision to reach out to? While documenta typically reached out to an ‘enlightened’ and often elite crowd that was familiar, if not well-versed in (western) contemporary arts and visual culture, many works in documenta 15 were not so much  the ‘usual’ art objects. Rather, they were many things at once—a sharing of artistic practices and showcase of collaborations, and in a way resisting expectations for a ‘usual’ documenta, now inhabited by non-western artists.

This controversy also brings us to think about art institutions such as documenta’s efforts at ‘decolonising’ art. While they hoped to open space for non-european artists representation—through gestures and postures of searching for, invitation into, and hence inclusion by documenta’s finding committee—the controversy reveals limitations of such well-intended gestures of invitation and inclusion towards non-european representation if they still sit within european institutional art spaces, their power structures, logics and knowledges. New wine surely cannot fit into old wineskins.

It also highlights the interplay of power and hierarchies between documenta and ruangrupa. On the one hand, documenta allowed space for ruangrupa’s art knowledges and practices, their ‘chaotic’ and polyphonic assembly of ‘unruly’ artists and aesthetics that caused disruption and surprise. Yet this ‘chaos’ was swiftly managed by various bodies, including documenta, state and cultural ministries intervening. On the other hand, this ‘cacophony’ of unruly artist collectives have nevertheless managed to destabilise and bring about further conversations about documenta’s setup, and its longstanding eurocentric practices, albeit for a short moment.

Thus articles for this section do not merely dwell on the controversy per se, but also point to ruangrupa’s practice of lumbung and their collaborative works with other artist collectives, as well as the body of artworks that were featured in documenta 15 which were overshadowed by the controversy. In addition with regard to the controversy at documenta 15, artist statements narrating their perspectives and experiences are also included so as to hear from them.

These materials have been included in the hope that for some of us who would want to think more about theorising or decolonial work in Southeast Asia, we would likewise not be sidetracked by the controversy. This may inadvertently end up (re)centering whiteness and its attending eurocentric histories and their logics of what makes ‘acceptable’ art histories and works from the global south. What more, since this attention is not a two-way traffic nor necessarily reciprocated as elucidated by documenta 15. At the same time, we hope to point to an option and potentialities of lumbung as another art practice, ethos and imagination from otherwise overlooked artistic sites in Southeast Asia.

AuthorTitle of articleDate of articleOrganisation/
Publisher
Article CategoryMediumFor more information
Ade Darmawan & farid rakunAsia Art Archive Annual Artist’s Lecture: ruangrupa45007Asia Art Archiveruangrupa/Lumbung-relatedvideo recording Link
Angga WijayaGudskul Art Collective: Learning while Nongkrong, Nongkrong while Learning44112Asia Art Archive Ideas Journalruangrupa/Lumbung-relatedweb article Link
David TehWho Cares a Lot? Ruangrupa as Curatorship41067Afterall Journal, Vol. 30ruangrupa/Lumbung-relatedweb article Link
e-fluxLiving Lumbung: The Shared Spaces of Art and Life
ruangrupa and Nikos Papastergiadis in Conversation
44317e-fluxruangrupa/Lumbung-relatedweb article Link
Hili PerlsonWho are ruangrupa? A closer look at Documenta 15’s Artistic Director43521Frieze ruangrupa/Lumbung-relatedweb article Link
John ZarobellThe Collective Model: documenta fifteen31 July 2022Third Text (online)ruangrupa/Lumbung-relatedonline journal article Link
Putra HidayatullahLumbung storyno dateruangrupa websiteruangrupa/Lumbung-relatedweb article Link
Wulan Dirgantoro, Elly KentWe need to talk! Art, offence and politics in Documenta 1529 June 2022New Mandalaruangrupa/Lumbung-relatedweb article Link
Cristina Sanchez-Kozyrevaruangrupa: “be that person everyone wants to hang out with”44503Curtain: The Artpool Magazineruangrupa/Lumbung-relatedweb article Link
Thomas J Berghuisruangrupa: What could be ‘Art to Come’40725Third Text, Vol. 25, Issue 4, pp. 395-407ruangrupa/Lumbung-relatedjournal article Link
Geronimo CristóbalPushing against the roof of the world: ruangrupa’s prospects for documenta fifteen44130Third Text (online)ruangrupa/Lumbung-relatedweb article Link
ruangrupa, BOLOHO & Reading RoomLumbung米仓44752BOLOHOruangrupa/Lumbung-relatedbooklet Link
ruangrupaDocumenta 15: Majalah Lumbung-A magazine on Harvesting and Sharing44866Hatje Cantzruangrupa/Lumbung-relatedBook Link
Annie Jael KwanGudskul: new ecosystems for learning43843ArtReviewruangrupa/Lumbung-relatedweb article Link
farid rakunBiennale Arte 2015 Section 5: Knowledge as Collective Experience2015Creative Time Summit Year 10ruangrupa/Lumbung-relatedvideo recording Link
farid rakunLumbung44350What Could/Should Curating Do curatorial courseruangrupa/Lumbung-relatedvideo recording Link
ArtReviewWho’s Exploiting Who? ruangrupa on documenta fifteen26 September 2022ArtReviewInterviews-
ruangrupa about Documenta 15
web article interview Link
Kabir JhalaGermany has cancelled us’: As embattled Documenta 15 closes, its curators ruangrupa reflect on the exhibition—and what they would have done differently22 September 2022The Art NewspaperInterviews-
ruangrupa about Documenta 15
web article interview Link
Kate Brown‘Risks Come With the Concept’: Documenta 15’s Curators Reflect on a Controversial, History-Making Show
Ruangrupa reflected on the turbulent show as it comes to a close.
22 September 2022Artnet newsInterviews-
ruangrupa about Documenta 15
web article interview Link
Mi Youruangrupa: a sustainable model for documenta fifteen, and after25 May 2022Ocula MagazineInterviews-
ruangrupa about Documenta 15
web article interview Link
Lumbung Gallery (artworks from all artists for documenta15)2022Lumbung gallery in collaboration with artistsArtworks website Link
documenta 15 artistsdocumenta fifteen handbook: The exhibbition companion2022Hatje CantzArtworks Book Link
Ade DarmaranSpeech by Ade Darmawan (ruangrupa) in the Committee on Culture and Media, German Bundestag, July 6, 20226 July 2022ruangrupa websiteartist-issued
statements/responses
web article Link
documenta 15
finding committee
The Statement of Finding Committee15 Sept 2022documenta 15 finding committeeartist-issued
statements/responses
web article Link
ruangrupaAnti-Semitism Accusations against documenta: A Scandal about a Rumor7 May 2022eflux Notesartist-issued
statements/responses
letter from ruangrupa Link
ruangrupa and
documenta participating artists
Censorship Must Be Refused: Letter from lumbung community27 July 2022e-flux Notesartist-issued
statements/responses
web article Link
Alex GreenbergerDocumenta’s Anti-Semitism Controversy, Explained: How a German Art Show Became the Year’s Most Contentious Exhibition22 July 2022ARTnewsArticles-
ruangrupa and Documenta 15
web article Link
Andreas SchalegelNever Mind the Germans30 June 2022Nordic Art ReviewArticles-
ruangrupa and Documenta 15
web article Link
Catherine HicklyThe Bumpy Road to a Group-Led Documenta10 June 2022The New York TimesArticles-
ruangrupa and Documenta 15
web article Link
Christina Schootdocumenta fifteen: The Art of Staying in Dialogue2 September 2022Universes in universeArticles-
ruangrupa and Documenta 15
web article Link
Claudia Königdocumenta fifteen: Awaiting ruangrupa. A Performative Walk
through Kassel, September 2021
March 2022Southeast of Now Articles-
ruangrupa and Documenta 15
journal article Link
Dirk MosesThe Documenta, Indonesia, and the Problem of Closed Universes24 July 2022The New Fascism SyllabusArticles-
ruangrupa and Documenta 15
web article Link
Euge MurilloArt Is Political: Is Documenta Afraid of the Global South?22 July 2022The New Fascism SyllabusArticles-
ruangrupa and Documenta 15
web article Link
Eyal WeizmanIn Kassel4 August 2022London Review of BooksArticles-
ruangrupa and Documenta 15
web article Link
Goh Sze Ying,
Kathy Rowland
documenta fifteen Ends, But The Timeline Continues26 Sept 2022Arts EquatorArticles-
ruangrupa and Documenta 15
web article Link
Kate BrownDocumenta, Battered by Scandals, Gets Hit With Yet Another Allegation of Antisemitic Imagery in the Show28 July 2022ArtnetArticles-
ruangrupa and Documenta 15
web article Link
Mi YouWhat Politics? What Aesthetics?: Reflections on documenta fifteen1 November 2022e-flux journalArticles-
ruangrupa and Documenta 15
online journal article Link
Michael RothbergLearning and Unlearning with Taring Padi: Reflections on Documenta2 July 2022The New Fascism SyllabusArticles-
ruangrupa and Documenta 15
web article Link
Rainer WerningDocumenta 15: Exposed anti-Semitism or misjudged anticommunism critique?16 July 2022The Jakarta PostArticles-
ruangrupa and Documenta 15
web article Link
Siddhartha MitterDocumenta was a whole vibe. Then a scandal killed the buzz.July 2022The NYTArticles-
ruangrupa and Documenta 15
web article Link