Traditional Balinese Painting Workshop with Made Bayak
April 3rd, 2019 at 2:00 pm

Date & Time
April 3rd, 2019 at 2:00 pm
– April 3rd, 2019 at 3:00 pm
Location
Lamar Dodd School of Art, S350
Type of Event
Workshop
Please bring your general painting and drawing supplies to this free event at the Lamar Dodd School of Art. Artist I Made Bayak Muliana will be leading us through how to create traditional kamasan symbols, explaining the meaning behind them and their development within contemporary Balinese painting practices.
Suggested supplies: Paper, pencil, ink, white, black, and red acrylic paint
Learn more about Made Bayak and the exhibition New Gods | Old Gods at ATHICA here.
Made Bayak’s visual practice merges images and symbols from Balinese cosmology and current Balinese political and ecological movements to bring attention to parasitic real estate development and past actions of violence within Bali. The colorful and piercing narrative works that will be on exhibition use waste plastic and trash, ink, acrylic paint, stencils, and traditional Balinese painting techniques to tell the most difficult stories of Balinese history. Additional documentary photographs and videos of his work and contextual information about Bali will be exhibited alongside. Made Bayak will make several appearances at ATHICA, including a musical performance on March 27 and an artist talk and performance piece, “Radical Resilience within Visual Art-making (Art as Activism)” on March 31. All events are free and open to all.
Made Bayak’s work is brought to ATHICA by the curators Dr. Peter Brosius and Alden DiCamillo. Dr. Brosius is a Distinguished Research Professor in the UGA Department of Anthropology; Alden DiCamillo is an interdisciplinary artist, graduate student with the UGA Lamar Dodd School of Art, and ATHICA intern. Together with their colleague, Dr. Sarah Hitchner, Assistant Research Scientist at UGA, they are conducting research on how Made Bayak’s work weaves narratives of explicit and implicit violence into a visual activism that boldly uses innovative material experimentation combined with wildly energetic portrayals of Balinese cosmology. Anthropologists Brosius and Hitchner have conducted long-term research in Indonesia and Malaysia regarding threats to cultural landscapes and displacement of indigenous communities through land degradation and violent real estate policy.