Welcome to the
website
of Jonathan Tse

BEAUTY
IN SIMPLE OBJECTS
There
is a certain stillness and quiet beauty that pervades the work of
Jonathan Tse,
from Morandiesque still lives of print workshop interiors to more
recent
personal/political works ‘Portrait
of an
Australian’ and ‘His Masters Voice’.
These are the works of someone who although quietly spoken, remains
unafraid to
directly or indirectly, tackle the bigger issues in our society, and
who does
so with accuracy, simplicity and humour. They are works of great
technical excellence
that seduce the eye while allowing their emotional undercurrents to be
revealed
slowly.
The
lovingly rendered prints of ‘Lessons in
Life’ (1994) present meditative still life images from the print
workshop.
They evoke an environment familiar to the artist/printmaker, as a
second home,
a place of work and of art making. "That series came about when I first
started working at the Queensland College of Art in Morningside,
Brisbane in
1993. All aspects of my work environment fascinated me, hence the title
‘Lessons in Life’. The image of the old
ink tin and bitumen containers inside the cabinet was appropriately
titled ' Shelf life'. The acid cabinet and the
eye wash bottle on the table, 'A
dangerous life'. Cliché titles when you think about it, but somehow
they
all came together as ‘lessons in Life’”.
Jonathan
and his family migrated to Australia in 1975 from Hong Kong. References
to this
period, in the form of text from the artist’s school books and family
photos,
are reproduced thoughtfully in ‘Portrait
of an Australian’ (1998),
which takes the form of an Australian passport with a re-worked,
personalised
coat of arms on the front cover. Showing a book, a printing press, an
aeroplane
and a Visual Arts Degree, all symbols that have represent various
milestones in
Jonathan’s life. ‘Portrait of an
Australian’ was printed at the time of Pauline Hanson’s One Nation
political ascendency in Queensland. Although it was not printed as a
direct
response to these events, it nevertheless advances a notion of what it
means to
be an Australian and provides a subtle critique to the idea of an
exclusionist
immigration policy, far more eloquent than those by any politician at
the time.
As Jonathan has said “The artist's book, 'Portrait of an
Australian’ was made after some serious soul
searching into my family history, but many people see it as an artist’s
response to the right-wing views of Pauline Hanson's One Nation Party.
It just
happened at the time of One Nation’s rise, so one page referring to One
Nation
was in this book”. At a time of mandatory detention and bungled
deportations,
this intimate document of one family’s story continues to resonate and
comment
on the politics of the day.
Jonathan
has been an avid, almost obsessive collector of toys for many years. "It first began when I picked up a
cheap Hong Kong toy from a second hand shop in Brisbane. I remember
having one
when I was a kid but when our family emigrated to Australia, my parents
only
packed what they thought were the essentials and many of our childhood
things
were left behind. That's how it all began. I guess most collections
start with
one, then another, then more again, until it finally it gets out of
hand, until
you reach the point where you wish you could finish it, but from my
experience
I tell you, it can never end”.
It
is from this ever expanding collection that Jonathan has sourced the
images for
his most recent works, including ‘His
Master Voice’ (2004).
Although his most political to date was made as
a response to the political realities of our time it still retains his
signature
quiet strength and wry humour. The image of a dog pushing a ball,
re-coloured
as the Iraqi flag, is taken from an old toy stamped with the words made in the U.S. Zone, Germany, “The
markings intrigued me and led me to research more about the origins of
the toy.
The findings were interesting. It was after World War II, that the
Allies
occupied the defeated country of Germany and encouraged the return of
industries. Many products, including toys, produced in this American
sector of
Bavaria up to the 1950’s carried the words ‘made
in the U.S. Zone’”. By re-contextualizing the image of this toy
(and many
others in previous work) Jonathan Tse imbues these objects of simple
beauty
with the hallmarks of all his work; quiet strength, playful humour, and
timelessness.
Benjamin Byrne
2005
Favourite
Links
Current
Projects
Last
revised: 10 April 2008