Sunday, September 18, 2011

360celsius ~ 2011

  http://www.360celsius.com/creative/art-from-the-heart/ .


ART FROM THE HEART

An Interview with Artist Honey Khor

For this artist, painting is not just a passion. It’s a medium to reach out to those who are in need of a helping hand. Her goal is to give back to charity. She goes the extra mile to reach out to children with her knowledge of art.

The Malaysian artist Honey Khor graduated from the Malaysia Institute of Art (MIA) in 1995, where she majored in Fine Arts after completing her high school education in Penang. When asked about what made her become an artist, Honey with a wide smile on her face replied, “My heart told me to do so.” Her sincerity and passion was clearly evident on her face.
Besides being an artist, she also owns Honey Child Development Centre in Puchong and plays a part as an art teacher at the centre. With more than 16 years of experience in teaching art to children at her centre and various kindergartens in KL and Selangor, Honey is dedicated to keeping her art programs and lessons tailor made to her student’s need and temperament – a vital link in the curriculum.
Classifying her work as contemporary art, Honey’s paintings rarely transcend the humdrum making her work comprehensible and rational. She persistently refuses to submit to grimness. Her works are creative, full of energy and joyous. It’s brimming with hope and harmony. “I love colours and also patterns. Back in college, there was this lecturer who had issues with my style – she claimed I used too much colours. So, she tried to change my method; but little did she know that it was going to be really difficult to separate me from those elements. Personally, I think I was born with the love for colours and my joyful and care-free childhood further accentuated my love for it,” says Honey. “Sometimes, even when I’m a bit down, the colours that I use can seem a bit dull but there’s always colour!
Like every creative person, Honey’s creativity flows like a river. “My paintings tell a story. Even if it’s a plant, a flower or a butterfly, it’s all a part of me. My love for nature has influenced a lot of my work.” Honey who adores dragonflies also mentioned that the little fluttering insect takes her down memory lane, her childhood days. “Whenever I look at a dragonfly, it brings to live that little kid inside of me.”
“My best moment as an artist is when I sit in front of my canvas and paint freely with no worries. It makes me feel as if I’m a piece of art.”
From where does she get all that inspiration? “My inspirations come from every single thing around me. From all that I can touch and feel to the people I meet, they are in some way an inspiration. When I wake up in the morning, I always tell myself that I’m blessed with all that I have, and I’m grateful for this life and I am able to do something that I love to do. That’s just inspiring enough for me”!
This lady with a beautiful soul is a part of The Colors of Cambodia Project in Siem Reap. She offers her talents, knowledge, kindness and warm style of educating the children through art. “When I’m back in KL, my heart is always with those children in Cambodia. Just thinking about them makes me happy because although these kids live in poverty, they are very content with what they have. They take one day at a time, something a lot of people lack these days.”
Back home, Honey enjoys spending time with her two sons. While I was having a chat with her, she mentioned about her first attempt to teach her eldest son about art. “We were sitting at the table and I gave him a piece of paper and told him to do his scribbling on the paper. He knew his limits, where to scribble and where not to scribble. Later on, I actually gave him his own piece of wall in his room that he was allowed to scribble on.” According to Honey, he only scribbled once on the wall although he was given his full rights but then he came up to her and said that he didn’t like drawing on the wall. He wanted paper. I was sitting there thinking how lucky she is to have a son like that! For a moment, I felt sorry my parents. I was quite an artist as a kid!
As with her second son, she went through the same process – the table talk, the handing-over of his “personal space”. “Unfortunately, he worked his magic on the couch and the wall,” she mentions with a chuckle. “I didn’t want to limit their creativity although I had to repaint the walls and send the couch for a good cleaning. I just kept reminding him about his wall. We eventually made a pact with one another.” As a child, Honey claimed that she never used to draw on walls but she was into drawing on soil. “It was like a huge canvas! That was my personal space.”
“I love the way kids do their artwork. As adults, I think we ponder too much on things – we think too much about the rights and wrongs but these kids are like free birds. While we sit there worrying about colour tones and proportions, they’re just letting their emotions out and the purity in them that they convey through their art can’t be compared to anything else in this world.”
“The kids’ that I teach are like little Picasso’s. They do come up with the most amazing things at times and sometimes it seems like I can learn a lot from them,” mentions Honey.
As for Honey, painting is a what-I-see-is-what-I-get medium. There’s one stroke of the brush and her aspirations are there for you to see. “I like to take a closer look at things and I emphasize them in my art. For example, leaves and tree trunks have patterns on them but by taking a closer look, you will see something distinctive in it. There is definitely that one element in any creation that sets it apart from another. That’s how my art is. Each art carries a different message.”
“I started off with oil painting but I’m more into acrylic these days. When I’m practicing on my sketching, I use water colour, charcoal, and pencils. As an art teacher, I think I need to be versatile. I need to constantly brush up on my skills. Till today, I still believe that practice makes perfect. You can’t be a superstar over-night. Have the patience to work through things and you will succeed at whatever you do,” says Honey.
“When getting prepared to do an artwork, I recollect all the events in my life. I clear my mind and pick a topic I’d want to work on at the moment. My attachment with Cambodia is so strong that most of the time, my mind wanders to my experiences in Cambodia. I relive the memories by looking at photographs that were taken in Cambodia and I’ll start my sketches. As my artworks depict mostly on happiness, I never do continue working on them if I’m feeling the slightest bit down. It just won’t turn out right. When you work on something, you need to place your heart and soul into it.”
When asked about her love for art, Honey stated, “It’s always been in me that I can make a living by doing other things. It has always been impossible for me to make a living out of selling my artwork. When my art has gone on sale and someone purchases it, I want that art piece to remind that person about the kind deed that they have done. I want my painting to serve as a sign of gratitude right from my heart. It should serve its purpose as a constant reminder that you have helped provide for a child’s educational need.”
Giving back to the community in Cambodia, that’s the sole purpose for Honey. As for charity works, she has donated the proceeds from the sales of her artwork and the Cambodian children’s artwork to Colors Of Cambodia in order to provide a better future for the children in their country. She has also placed the paintings from her students back in KL for sale. These proceeds also go for charity.
How hard is it to be a full-time artist in Malaysia? “Believe me when I say that it’s really tough! I can’t just sit there and wait for exhibitions and people to buy my paintings. I’ll be a goner by then. I have to balance my life. I need to seek a living by doing my job as a teacher and at the same time, do my part for charity. I can place my painting in a gallery but most places charge a hefty price, a certain percentage from the profit goes to the gallery. As we’re doing this for charity, the earnings will not be sufficient. I have to pounce at every opportunity that I get to showcase the artworks. It’s a tough job but someone’s got to do it.”
“I admire the struggles that artists such as Van Gogh and Paul Gauguin have gone through. They are my inspiration. Times were hard for them and they only became popular after their death. At this age and time, we’re considerably lucky. With the help of media, be it print or online social media’s, word spreads like wild fire. But, at the end of the day, hard work plays a big part in our achievements. Luck plays a very small role. Then again, I love art. I think everyone has a talent in them. We all work hard to achieve our goals and it’s always nice to have someone appreciate your work.”

Star Metro ~ 2011

http://thestar.com.my/metro/story.asp?sec=central&file=/2011/6/25/central/8933284 

Artist holds solo exhibition at restaurant

By THO XIN YI thoxinyi@thestar.com.my

A PAINTING reflects the artist’s deepest feelings and thoughts, offering a glimpse into her inner world.
Aptly titled “Colours of My Journey”, Honey Khor’s solo art exhibition at Penang Village in Great Eastern Mall, Kuala Lumpur, invites visitors to follow Khor on her life’s journey.
The bright and colourful pieces injected a sense of playfulness and livened up the white and classy interior of the restaurant.
Happy time: The people featured in Khor’s paintings always have the corners of their mouths tilted upward
It was impossible not to smile along with the people featured in the paintings, who have the corners of their mouths tilted upwards.
Be it the sarong-clad woman pouring a ladle of water down her long hair, the family portrait of Khor and her two sons in her parents’ sundry shop, or the Balinese woman dancing in front of the Mother Temple of Bali, each of the characters in Khor’s paintings seemed to be very contented with their lives.
But not all her paintings told a happy story.
Two of her paintings — painted four years apart — depicted the change in her feelings towards motherhood and marriage.
The first one titled “Love” had a serene and smiling woman sitting cross-legged amid plants and flower, holding a newborn in her left arm and a cactus on her right palm.
Another took on a pessimistic approach, featuring a gloomy woman buried in the soil with only her head and neck exposed.
A bird was painted on her forehead while three other birds - each carrying a face symbolising Khor’s then husband and two sons - flying next to her.
Wanting to be free: This painting reflects Khor’s misery in having to set art aside for her family.
“I got married soon after I graduated from the Malaysian Institute of Art, and gave birth to my first son. I enjoyed motherhood and envisioned a beautiful life ahead.
“Since I was preoccupied with my family, I put painting aside and did not produce any artwork for a few years.
“In the second painting, I portrayed myself as a plant (the woman buried in soil) - I couldn’t move because I needed to nurture lives. But my mind wasn’t peaceful and I needed my private time to paint.
“It was then I realised that I wanted art to be present in my life. The bird on the woman’s forehead indicated my desire to fly,” Khor, 38, from Butterworth, explained.
Her sons are now 15 and 10, hence she has more time to pursue her love for art.
Five years ago, she chanced upon a yearbook, in which the younger her scribbled a wish to travel around the world.
“It’s the wish I had almost forgotten. To make this wish come true, I decided to go for my first holiday to Bali,” she said.
She recorded the local lifestyle and culture in her sketchbook as she travelled. Since the maiden overseas trip, she had been to Cambodia, Vietnam, China and Yogyakarta in Indonesia.
During her trip to Cambodia three years ago, she came across Colours of Cambodia, an organisation founded in 2003 to introduce the arts to the children in Siem Reap.
Besides volunteering to teach there two to four times a year, Khor had also organised two art shows to raise funds for the programme.
Other than the children, another pull factor that kept her returning to Cambodia was captured in a painting titled “Seam Reap in My Eyes”.
“The scenery there reminded me of my childhood, where we chased after dragonflies, frolicked in the river and catched ‘fighting fish’,” she said.
Nature played a huge role in Khor’s paintings. Trees, plants and dragonflies in bright hues and intriguing patterns were the evidence of her creativity.
Khor, who teaches art in a centre she established in Puchong, said the children’s innocence, sincere smile and imagination inspired her painting.
This exhibition also featured some of Khor’s sketches and watercolour paintings.
The exhibition is going on till July 11 at Penang Village, Lot 8 & 9, Level 3, Great Eastern Mall, 303, Jalan Ampang, 50450 Kuala Lumpur. Opening hours are from 11.30am to 9.30pm.For details, call 03-4257 1698.

"Transcend"

"Transcend" Oil on Canvas 120cm x 120cm 2019 The lotus. Emerges and rises from the mud . Untouched by the world . It embodie...