the
coffee connoisseur 51
Circular Road
The Gallery
Opening
Hours :
Monday
to Friday
11.00am to
00.30am Saturday
& Sunday
from 11am
to 1.30am
The
artists in
front of Ray’s
camera are:
Sepi
Valeriu
Ann
Healey
Claude
Verly (manager)
Ray
Ong (artist
photographer)
Einstein
Kristiansen
Christiane
Wyler
Images
of art: the
artist in
front of the
camera
Art
is a reflection
of the artists
who creates
it. They transfer
part of themselves
onto the canvas,
writing their
thoughts,
feelings and
responses
to the world
through the
medium of
their brush.
This aspect
of art too
often remains
unseen; the
viewer sees
only the finished
work and thereby
misses part
of the communicative
element of
art.
Ray
Ong is a photographer,
another kind
of artist,
who paints
with the camera,
snapping moments
and freezing
them forever.
By placing
the artist
in front of
his camera
Ray has intervened
with the artistic
process and
added this
missing dimension
– the artist
captured in
the process
of creating,
the transfer
of ideas from
a mind, to
the hand,
to the canvas.
The
artist laughs
as she paints;
the colours,
some bright,
some subdued,
are swept
onto the paper
to reflect
her inner
feelings.
She takes
a pen and
writes; she
is a poet
who adds her
words to her
colours.
Another
artist frowns
in concentration
as she bends
over the table
at which she
works. The
room is infused
with strong,
bold ‘rainbows’
of colour
that she arranges
and rearranges
until her
subconscious
acknowledges
that everything
is as it should
be. She stops
and contemplates
her work and
suddenly breaks
into a smile
and then laughs
as the inner
feelings she
was trying
to express
fall out onto
the colours
before her.
This
artist is
a clown who
takes hold
of the same
colours and
creates painted
childlike
space of talking
animals and
dayglo patterns
to lighten
up a world
that is constantly
reminding
us of sorrow.
The crazy
alter world
of an artist
casts away
that heavy
load and reminds
us that we
need to live,
we need to
immerse ourselves
in laughter
and join his
universe of
colour.
But
the colours
of life may
also be more
sombre and
this artist
draws on the
contrasts
of sorrow
and joy in
different
aspects of
his work.
He focuses
for a while
on a huge
canvas stretched
across a wall.
The upturned
faces portrayed
are heavy
with sorrow
as they gaze
at the crucifixion
and weep.
The artist
turns away
and adds a
few strokes
to a portrait
of a beautiful,
smiling woman.
He keeps his
thoughts well
hidden, and
yet we somehow
know that
there is a
connection.
To
understand
another artist
we need to
see the dance
of his brush
across the
canvas. It
twists and
turns and
sweeps in
an arc in
time to the
rhythm of
his arm. Until
you see the
artist dance
through his
work you cannot
truly appreciate
the rhythm
of the finished
work.
And
so do all
the artists
work to a
rhythm, and
inner rhythm
of thoughts
and feelings.
This is the
source of
their creation,
and this is
what the camera
has captured.
Dr.
Sian E. Jay
For
more information
or to arrange
an interview with
the artist, contact: