Of a Time and Place

When one draws one can claim to really see.

Of A Time and Place

Of A Time and Place is, in a sense, a collection of 'postcards' - albeit, large ones. Like most good postcards, they are a retroactive view of the present. I am interested in places that reek of the past, places that are uncelebrated, perhaps, but invested with a sense of transience. 

In our image-choked world, where a touch of the finger suffices to confer immortality to an experience, I think it is important to slow down and to really see. And when one draws one can claim to really see. I believe that this meticulously 'fabricated realism' can restructure our sense of the beautiful and enable us to see the extraordinary behind the ordinary.

Of a Time and Place pays homage to cities both here and abroad. I was transplanted to Melbourne in the late sixties to study. It is a place I now call home. It is small wonder that there is a preponderance of images of Melbourne and Sydney (images 1 to 9). Blessed with abundant sunshine, activities tend to take place outdoors. Take image 8 for instance; here, a kerbside has been commandeered and turned into a makeshift eatery. The family interaction is interesting.

Japan also features strongly in my drawings. My wife and I have travelled here with some regularity; our son being gainfully employed in Japan may have something to do with it. Temples and shrines abound here - all are beautifully preserved (Images 10, 14 and 17). Order and respect are the hallmarks of this society - exemplified by image 13, where passengers wait patiently in line at a bus stop at Kyoto Station. Of course, there is the jostling between the two children whose intransigence goes unnoticed by the mother, perhaps intentionally. There is also a more intimate image - a romantic liaison, perhaps (Image 16). It is summer, to judge by the dress code, and the dining table is immaculately scrubbed; all the accoutrements associated with fine dinning are perfectly in place - except, perhaps, for a pair or two of chopsticks that had fallen onto the roof tiles.

Hoi An in Vietnam is represented by ”The Sirens of the Sea,” as I call this image (image28). The camaraderie among the fisherwomen is affectionate and touching. Image 29 is also from Vietnam. Catching up and eating out with friends is universal. “Little India” is a vibrant and colourful enclave in Singapore (image 26). Penang (image 18) and Kota Kinabalu (19 &20) are places of homecoming where family members are on hand to ensure that an enjoyable stay is to be had by all. Hidden behind a busy thoroughfare in Shanghai (image25), locals can be seen gorging themselves with great abandon at a makeshift open-air restaurant. Wuxi (image24), is another modern metropolis and I have drawn it with a mixture of natural and artificial lighting. Italy is like a second home to me, having visited it three times (images 21 to 23). Jeffrey Become, a fine photographer and travel writer, once remarked that “Burano is the most colourful square mile in the Mediterranean.” I can confirm the truth of this remark. The effulgent colours of the facades make it a delight to illustrate. Footsore and tired, I found refuge in a Bistro in Cordoba (image28).

Of a Time and Place owes much to Hiroshige's monumental One Hundred Famous Views of Edo, Eugene Atget's Old Paris and Berenice Abbott's Changing New York. I hope that my images, like theirs, go beyond documentation, and become poetic utterances about places and time, all given permanence by drawing.

Moses Tan