1 Malaysia series, 2014, Acrylic on Canvas, 60cm x 60cm
1 Malaysia series, 2014, Acrylic on Canvas, 60cm x 60cm
1 Malaysia series, 2014, Acrylic on Canvas, 60cm x 60cm
1 Malaysia series, 2014, Acrylic on Canvas, 60cm x 60cm
Experiment
Experiment
I am Bat Man, 2014, Fabric Collages on Canvas, 183cm x 91cm
Darth Vader, 2014, Fabric Collages on Canvas, 183cm x 91cm
The Mysterious 'V', 2014, Fabric Collages on Canvas, 183cm x 91cm
Spider Man, 2014, Fabric Collages on Canvas, 183cm x 91cm
Loki, 2014, Fabric Collages on Canvas, 183cm x 91cm
Davy Jones, 2014, Fabric Collages on Canvas, 183cm x 91cm
Edward Scissorhands, 2014, Fabric Collages on Canvas, 183cm x 91cm
Bruce Lee, 2014, Fabric Collages on Canvas, 183cm x 91cm
Walit, 2014, Fabric Collages on Canvas, 122cm x 122cm
Walit
This painting is a portrait of someone deeply significant to the artist, her father. It was created using old fabrics that once belonged to him, allowing the artwork to hold both physical and emotional traces of his presence. The composition is based on the only existing photograph of him, and the use of a conventional square frame echoes the shape of a remembered photograph, a fragment of memory preserved in time.
Each chosen fabric carries its own history, and their differing colours serve to redefine the father’s identity through the artist’s eyes, a quiet act of remembrance and reconstruction. The portrait captures a faint, tender smile, and its gaze is turned toward the artist herself. In this silent dialogue between pieces, there lies a sense of pride and connection a father looking lovingly upon his daughter.
Ultimately, this portrait becomes a wish made visible, a yearning for reunion, a hope that he would be proud of who she has become. It stands as both a dedication and a message that he is still remembered, still present in her art. Viewers are invited to find their own reflection within this longing, to recall someone they too have missed. The collage aims not merely to depict a face of her father, but to awaken emotion so that what lingers in the heart is not the portrait itself, but the memory of their own loved ones.