Three Elegies. 2023. Artist Portrait by Chris Reisig.
Represented by Reisig and Taylor Contemporary.
Dealer Contact: Emily Reisig.
Artwork Images and Recordings: View.
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+ Guest Speaker re: Keeping Beckett Live: Waiting for Godot Panel at the Geffen Playhouse. (November 12, 2024.)
<<Artistic Director Tarell Alvin McCraney joins a group of esteemed multidisciplinary Beckett Interpreters in conversation.>>
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+ Interview by Feargal Whelan (The Becket Circle (The Samuel Beckett Society): May 22, 2024).
+ Interview (Les Nouveaux Riches: March 9, 2024).
+ Publisher’s Eye by Alex Garner (Artillery: July 13, 2023)
+ Interview: The Act of Questioning, LA-based Multidisciplinary Artist Saun Santipreecha (Li Tang: October 24, 2023).
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/Recent Group Exhibition [Irrational Exhibits 13]:
October 26, 2024
Included work: Avant le deluge, après le rêve
Press Release:
+ Site.
Artist’s Text: File.
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/Recent Solo Exhibition [Reisig and Taylor Contemporary]:
May 25 - June 22, 2024
...These Things That Divide The World In Two...
Release:
Text:
+ Artist Installation Statement.
Supplements:
+ Essay by Saun Santipreecha, <…perhaps that’s what I am, the thing that divides the world in two…: Samuel Beckett’s The Unnamable, relational modularity, and nationalism>.
Press:
+ This Week’s Must-See Art (Curate LA: May 23-29, 2024).
+ Interview with Saun Santipreecha by Whelan Feargal (The Becket Circle (The Samuel Beckett Society): May 22, 2024).
Documentation:
+ Checklist.
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/Recent Institutional Installation [The Wende Museum]:
April 27, 2024 - September 15, 2024.
Institutional Installation.
Institution: Wende Museum (Culver City, CA).
Position: East German Guardhouse (in the Museum’s garden).
Release:
+ Statement.
Press:
+ <<Top 3 This Week>> (KCRW Art Insider: May 21, 2024). [re: [O-I-RI-R]. Current Installation at the Wende Museum].
Documentation:
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Working between disciplines and artforms, Saun Santipreecha investigates and (de)composes the systems, structures, stories, states, and sounds that build the space of body into the myth of a person or a place. By constantly questioning the position of a body in relation to its physical composition as well as its political, social, cultural, linguistic, and mythological conditioning or status, his work operates at the border between national, historical, and corporeal boundaries. As a temporary position split and displaced between observer, object, and subject, he rethinks the ethical or relational structure of bodies through looping and endlessly evolving compositions of (atonal) sound and sculptural structure. (The slippages and distortions of a body as a relational context coming between regulatory structures and drifting morphologies, multitudes and monads, provides an opportunity to reconfigure the possibilities of what it means for someone to relate to someone else (or somewhere else).)
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Bio
Saun Santipreecha is an interdisciplinary artist from Thailand who works in both visual and aural mediums. His artistic route in both disciplines began simultaneously, studying privately with two Thai Silpathorn Award recipients for Thai contemporary artists, visual artist Chalermchai Kositpipat and classical pianist/composer Nat Yontararak amongst other tutors and mentors. In 2008 he moved to Los Angeles where he pursued a career in music composition for film, collaborating with artists from multiple disciplines including fashion and video games while also working independently on projects culminating in the experimental album Dandelye (2022). His compositional work in film, TV, and fashion has been screened in over thirty film festivals worldwide including the Cannes Film Festival as well as at New York, Paris and LA Fashion Weeks. He has also worked in numerous capacities in the music department for a number of composers including John Debney, Danny Elfman, The Newton Brothers and Abel Korzeniowski.
Saun’s first institutional exhibition, [O-I-RI-R], is an installation in the East German Guardhouse at the Wende Museum (open April 27 - September 15, 2024). He had his debut solo exhibition, Dandelye—or, Beneath this River’s Tempo’d Time We Walk, in July, 2023 at Reisig and Taylor Contemporary. His first international solo exhibition, Per/formative Cities | A Nest of Triptychal Performances (curated by Camilla Boemio), took place February–March at AOC F58 Galleria Bruno Lisi, Rome. His second solo exhibition in Los Angeles at Reisig and Taylor Contemporary opens May 25. The exhibition is titled ...These Things That Divide The World In Two... and coincides with his participation as a panel speaker at the 9th Annual Conference of the Samuel Beckett Society—Beckett and Justice—at California State University, Los Angeles.
His work has been in various group exhibitions in Incheon National University, South Korea, New York, and Los Angeles, and he continues to work with artists and specialists across disciplines.
He is currently based in Los Angeles, CA.
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“My work is grounded in the position of questioning—or rather the questioning of position—in relation to frames and systems while acknowledging the inevitable necessity for frame and form to carry intent and meaning, to enable dialogue—ouroboros; the act of breaking myth being itself a form of myth-making.
My work as a whole is the form and process through and within which many of my inquires take, the oscillation between ideas and emotions, the investigation of our need to find meaning which leads to the theme of mythology and myth-making, itself another kind of frame and form which shapes and molds our perceptions of the world.”
{Biographical text and quoted statement courtesy of the artist.}
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Exhibitions
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- February 29 - March 15, 2024. Off-Site. Solo Exhibition.
PER/FORMATIVE CITIES | A Nest of Triptychal Performances
Curator: Camilla Boemio
Presenter: Reisig and Taylor Contemporary [with objet A.D]
Location: AOC F58 Galleria Bruno Lisi, Rome
Release:
Press:
+ Interview (Les Nouveaux Riches: March 9, 2024).
+ Feature (Artribune, March 4, 2024)
+ <<Una ragnatela di performances tripticali>> (Juliet: February 23, 2024)
+ Feature (exhibart: February 28, 2024).
Preliminaries:
- September 30 - October 4. Benefit Salon.
Emma Gray, Daniela Soberman, Ari Salka, Erica Everage, Kento Saisho, Keywan Tafteh, Sinclair Vicisitud, Suwichada Busamrong-Press, Saun Santipreecha, Rudik Ovsepyan, objet A.D, Chris Reisig & Leeza Taylor.
Documentation:
Recordings
+ Exhibition Videos
Press:
+ This Week’s Must-See Art (Curate LA: September 28-August 4, 2023).
- July 1 - July 29, 2023. Debut Solo Exhibition:
Dandelye—or, Beneath this River’s Tempo’d Time We Walk
Documentation:
+ Limited Edition Print Catalogue
+ Poetry Reading (Text)
+ Woven Histories (Performance Text)
Recordings:
+ Exhibition Videos
+ Woven Histories (Second Movement)
+ Let the Wind Speak (Sound Sculpture)
Press:
+ Publisher’s Eye by Alex Garner (Artillery: July 13, 2023)
+ Interview: The Act of Questioning, LA-based Multidisciplinary Artist Saun Santipreecha (Li Tang: October 24, 2023).
+ Interview with Phillip Johnson (The Art & The Artist: August 13, 2023)
+ Li Tang (July 18, 2023)
+ Film by L.A. Art Documents (July 20, 2023)
+ This Week’s Must-See Art (Curate LA: June 29-July 6, 2023)
+ Film by EMSARTS (July 4, 2023)
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Inquire for Information, Image Details, or Status of Exhibited Works:
gallery@reisigandtaylorcontemporary.com
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Performance Statement by Saun Santipreecha
It has been incredibly emotional working on this performance piece—translationally working with and through Samuel Beckett’s ‘Footfalls’—over the past months and having the exhibition close with its final permutation in this form. Without a doubt, it was one of the most challenging works I’ve created and having the honor of my mother embodying May (and more, as curator objet A.D puts it) has been so deeply moving as from the beginning, this piece was conceived for her. After a long struggle, the key to the work came in the form of a transposition—or rather a re-embodied abstraction—using the ‘materiality’ of music itself to embody the constriction and permutation of trauma via the tension between tonality (and the inevitable shadow it casts, not unlike trauma, upon a subject in process) and its historical counterpart, atonality. The ‘voice’, here disembodied from the subject who cannot herself speak, and yet speaks profoundly through her body, begins in free atonality before itself succumbing to its own systematization (the twelve-tone system). By this point (Act III), the system-adopted subject cannot help but be tethered (by our perception as spectators) to the constricted dictation of tonality (a rotating trio of chords often associated today with the ‘emotional’, the ‘epic’: Db - Fm - Eb). Against this, we cannot help but judge the solo notes in relation to its counter-system and so the ‘gaze’ of one is constricted by the Other, neither able to escape from the other’s shadow.