This section looks at resources that negotiate with, and make meaning of Southeast Asia’s weather and environment, including humidity and volcanic terrains surrounding this region in both imaginations and everyday realities.
Southeast Asia has often been associated with the ‘tropical’—associated with heat and high humidity in countries near the equator. This description, according to Beynon, functioned as an often Orientalising western trope, with Southeast Asia as its climate-uncomfortable ‘other’, compared to its own temperate, comfortable climate. Juxtaposed with the histories of western colonialism and rhetoric of western modernism, imaginations of the ‘tropical’ has come to signify unruly jungles, the primitive and the wild, compared to the order, progress and human mastery over the natural world. Constant high heat and humidity also bring about challenges to processes of preservation in the arena of art. Agawal and Baxi had highlighted as early as 1974 how such a climate allows microorganisms and insects to thrive, and at the same time cause works made by wood to grow damp, paper to grow limp, or metals to corrode and rust rapidly. In this sense, ‘tropical’ is not merely a geographic descriptor, but one that carries conceptual, material and experiential weight, as well as a problem to be overcome.
In everyday practices, the solution comes as comfort for both human and art orientating around cooler and less humid environments, bringing proximity between technologies of air conditioning as a maintenance of a temperate climate in both domestic and public spaces.
An entropic outcome of heat and humidity such as rust need not be seen as an unfortunate outcome, but perhaps a potential agent of time and witness of decay, collapses and recoveries, evolution and extinction, or function as a material sign to ruination. Taking cue from Chitra Sankaran’s mention of Japanese aesthetics and wabi-sabi’s focus on beauty of natural aging and aged materials, could rust similarly be seen as both decay and art, sitting more comfortably in its tropical climate?
While the relationship between heat, humidity and the air-conditioner reflect an aspect of human’s control of nature and environment, there are also aspects of such relations beyond human control, but nevertheless garner human/community responses and adaptations to these environments.
One such arena is the Indonesian archipelago, structured around a ‘ring of fire’—an arc of volcanoes that run along Sumatra towards the Philippines. Yet agricultural communities choose to live within close proximities to active volcanoes due to the richness and fertility of its soils from aftermaths of eruptions, and simultaneously avoiding destruction from volcanoes’ eruptions. Volcanoes are not merely seen as harbingers of danger, but are also integral to community identity-making and sense-making in arenas of life that are beyond their control. This is seen where memory of past eruptions are immortalised through myths, rituals and stories passed down through generations of survivors. Sometimes, these pertain to what has to be done to prevent another calamity. In other places such as the Mayon volcano in the Philippines, it was thought to be the resting ground of the dead, as bodies carried up to the slope were believed to be reincarnated in the fires.
In this way, according to Bankoff, Newhall and Schikker, ‘co-volcanic societies’ are created between volcanoes, human communities, their identities and activities. Such lifeworlds of volcanoes and human communities have also been artistically explored and expressed, for example, with Indonesian curator, Mira Asrinigtyas, and her biennale-styled, site-specific project, 900mdpl. Comprising three iterations, these exhibitions revolve round their stories in and from Kaliurang—an aging historical resort in Yogyakarta, and 7km away from Mount Merapi—and the 2800 inhabitants living there within an immediate vicinity of the active volcano.
Through these examples, we hope to elucidate potentials in considering wider aspects of Southeast Asia’s climates and environments as potential sites of meaning-making.
Author/Artist | Name of work | Year of work | Publisher/ Journal | Medium | Country | More information |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Amanda Gayle, Felice Noelle Rodriguez, Lim Sheau Yun, Ong Kar Jin and Nisrina Aulia | All the Lands within the seas | 2021 | – | Exhibition | Malaysia | Exhibition information: Link Exhibition afterlife and catalog: Link |
Anthony Chen (director) | Wet Season | 2019 | – | Film | Singapore | Link |
Barbara Watson Andaya | Seas, oceans and cosmologies in Southeast Asia | 2017 | Journal of Southeast Asian Studies, Vol. 48, No. 3, pp 349–371 | Journal article/issue | Southeast Asia | Link |
Ben Tran | Air-conditioned Socialism: The Atmospheres of War and Globalization in Lê Minh Khuê’s Fiction | 2019 | Cultural Critique, Number 105, pp. 106-134 | Journal article/issue | Vietnam | Link |
Brian Bernards | Writing the South Seas : imagining the Nanyang in Chinese and Southeast Asian postcolonial literature | 2015 | University of Washington Press | Book | Southeast Asia | Link |
Dang Nghiem Van | The Flood Myth and the Origin of Ethnic Groups in Southeast Asia | 1993 | The Journal of American Folklore, Summer, 1993, Vol. 106, No. 421, pp. 304-337 | Journal article/issue | Southeast Asia | Link |
Greg Bankoff, Chris Newhall, Alicia Schrikker | The Charmed Circle: Mobility, Identity and Memory around Mount Mayon (Philippines) and Gunung Awu (Indonesia) Volcanoes | 2021 | Human Ecology (2021) 49:147–158 | Journal article/issue | Regional | Link |
Himanshu Prabha Ray | Coastal Shrines and Transnational Maritime Networks across India and Southeast Asia | 2021 | Routledge | Book | Southeast Asia | Link |
Jason Paolo Telles, John Charles Ryan, Jeconiah Louis Dreisbach (editors) | Environment, Media, and Popular Culture in Southeast Asia | 2022 | Springer Nature, Singapore | Book | Southeast Asia | Link |
Jeffrey Santa Ana, Heidi Amin Hong, Rina Garcia Chua, Zhou Xiaojing (editors) | Empire and Environment Ecological Ruin in the Transpacific | 2022 | University of Michigan Press | Book | Regional | Link |
Joanne Leow | Reading New Asian Tropicalities in Contemporary Singapore | 2020 | positions: asia critique, Volume 28, Number 4, pp. 869-904 | Journal article/issue | Singapore | Link |
Lai Chee-Kien, Anoma Pieris | Post-tropical/post-tsunami: Climate and architectural discourse in South and Southeast Asia | 2011 | Singapore Journal of Tropical Geography, Vol. 32, pp. 365–381 | Journal article/issue | Southeast Asia | Link |
Lav Diaz | Kagadanan Sa Banwaan Ning Mga Engkanto (Death in the Land of Encantos) | 2007 | Hubert Bals Fund, Sine Olivia Pilipinas | Film | Philippines | Link |
Martha Atienza | gilubong ang akon pusod sa dagat (my navel is buried in the sea) | 2012 | – | Artwork | Philippines | 4min preview of the video installation: Link More information on the film on artist’s website: Link Art project catalog: Link |
Matthew Schneider-Mayerson | Eating Chilli Crab in the Anthropocene: Environmental Perspectives on Life in Singapore | 2020 | Ethos Books | Book | Singapore | Link |
Mira Asriningtyas (curator) | 900mdpl | 2017-2022 | – | Exhibition | Indonesia | An exhibiton project consisting of 3 iterations in 2017, 2019 (titled, ‘Ghosts of a Thousand Conversations’) and 2022 (titled ‘Genealogy of Ghosts and How to live with them’. Information on this exhibition series: Link Snippets of artworks and process can be viewed on Youtube here: Link |
National Art Center, Tokyo, the Mori Art Museum, and the Japan Foundation Asia Center | Sunshower: Contemporary Art from Southeast Asia 1980s to Now Exhibition | 2017 | – | Exhibition | Southeast Asia | Link |
Olivia Khoo | A voice for elephants: Kirsten Tan’s Pop Aye and environmental dialogue in Southeast Asia | 2021 | Screen Vol. 62, Issue 4, pp. 568-576 | Journal article/issue | Southeast Asia | Link |
Om Prakash Agawal & Smita J. Baxi | Climate and museum architecture in South and South-East Asia | 1974 | Museum International, Volume 26, Issue3-4, pp. 269-273 | Journal article/issue | Southeast Asia | Link |
Paul Greenough and Anna Lowenhaupt Tsing (editors) | Nature in the Global South: Environmental Projects in South and Southeast Asia | 2003 | Duke University Press | Book | Regional | Link |
Valentin R. Troll, Frances M. Deegan & Nadhirah Seraphine | Ancient oral tradition in Central Java warns of volcano–earthquake interaction | 2021 | Geology Today, Vol. 37, No. 3, pp. 100-109 | Journal article/issue | Indonesia | Link |