Jompet KUSWIDANANTO<br/>
<em>The commoners</em> 2012 <!-- (installation view) --><br />

cotton on fiberglass, canvas, rubber, polyvinyl chloride, polyester, drums, electrical cord, metal, wood, shovels, electric fans, CRT television, megaphones, speakers, spotlights<br />
(1-42) 450.0 x 400.0 x 600.0cm (overall) (installation)<br />
National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne<br />
Purchased NGV Foundation, 2013<br />
2013.33<br />
© Jompet Kuswidananto
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Jompet Kuswidananto The commoners 2012

Jompet KUSWIDANANTO
The commoners 2012

The commoners is an installation comprising nine ‘ghost’ figures suspended from a metal roof-like structure. The heads of these faceless figures are evoked by Indonesian political T-shirts worn in ninja-like (to use the artist’s description) style – around the head and upper body – of roadside workers and farmers in Indonesia to protect them from the sun. The workers’ feet are similarly evoked by sneakers, gumboots and marching boots, but their bodies remain absent. The workers/protestors are surrounded by the ‘tools’ of their trade – shovels, drums, flags and megaphones – and the TV at their feet shows continuous footage of political rallies. At intermittent times, a soundtrack unexpectedly plays, the drums beat and the fans within the work blow the flags.