Paris is a city known for producing intellectuals and artists the likes of Claude Monet and Auguste Rodin. Most artists can only imagine being exhibited in any of the city's galleries; but one Filipina is already living that dream.
Lou Lim, a 26 year old from Binagonan, Rizal, was granted an artistic residency in Palais de Tokyo – a popular contemporary art museum in Paris – as part of its "Emerging Artists from Emerging Countries" program, which runs from November until June next year.
Emerging Artists from Emerging Countries is an innovative venture that grants six artists across Southeast Asia an artistic residency in Palais de Tokyo running from November until June.
Many firsts
After applying for Emerging Artists, Lim was the first ever Filipino to be accepted.
Lim was astonished upon receiving her grant: “It is an overwhelming feeling – deeply happy, thankful, and excited; but, at the same time, [I'm] still learning to build my confidence in what I do and will be doing, and trying not to entertain anxiety.”
Though Lim had taken part in group exhibits around the country like Fundacion Broke and Xing E Jacinto, this is her first time to be exhibited internationally and is actually her first time of the country. She said of the experience: “It is actually a lot of firsts for me. First [time] out of the country, first residency, first [time] to live on my own."
Her process
Lim works closely with mixed media, particularly paint on resin, and focuses on the surfaces and skin as subjects: “I wanted to explore and suggest the masking and unmasking of things. I am intrigued by how surface would imply that there is always something else."
Regardless of the medium and materials used, this had always been recurring subjects in her artwork.
Lim said, "By changing the surface of things, or just lifting them up from their familiar context to another, I would like to interrogate or provide a comparison and contrast, or more likely a setting in which there could be a hope to look in the gaps, or in the linkage between them not from a figure of authority, but as an individual that seeks to inquire and understand."
She remarked that she is fascinated with dissecting the skin as both a surface and a symbol; which create pieces that are at once individual and interconnected.