In Still Life, Suzann Victor presents the audience with a space infused with the drama of the ordinary by introducing the unpredictability of the organic and ephemeral into a hitherto sterile environment. Often ascribed as Victor’s first foray into installation work in 1992, Still Life is also credited for breaking ground in ideas of site-specificity, imperceptible movement (a prelude to her kinetic series), and the transformative reconfigurability of artworks whilst on display. 

Artist Statement

In Still Life, Suzann Victor presents the audience with a space infused with the drama of the ordinary by introducing the unpredictability of the organic and ephemeral into a hitherto sterile environment. Often ascribed as Victor’s first foray into installation work in 1992, Still Life is also credited for breaking ground in ideas of site-specificity, imperceptible movement (a prelude to her kinetic series), and the transformative reconfigurability of artworks whilst on display. 

Still Life originally occurred as a proliferation of raw eggplants that appeared to grow out of the dark slate walls of 5th Passage [now protruding from the institutional walls of the National Gallery of Singapore] each angled as an invasive protrusion, but in concert, as vertical planes of projectiles aimed viscerally at the audience - repelling proximity yet intrusive of the space usually demarcated for it, in a mutual dissolution of boundaries between seeing and presenting. 

Selected for its distinct plethora of curvatures and smooth shiny exterior in a palette of bright purple hues reminiscent of the painterliness of oils, each eggplant was composed into position by means of a straightened paper clip inserted into the gaps between slate tiles, spreading laterally, invading perpendicularly. 

Although seemingly humorous upon first encounter, initial impressions quickly give way to a threatening aura. The eggplants, with their characteristic phallic form establishes the place of presentation – and prompting the recognition of other social spaces for that matter – as patriarchal space: hostile. In recognising the gendering of spaces as such, the eventual putrefaction of the eggplants seemingly alludes to their eventual decay and nongenerative capacities.

DETAILS

YEAR
2025
EXHIBITIONS
Singapore Stories: Pathways and Detours in Art
National Gallery Singapore
First exhibited in 1992, Reconstructed in 2025
LOCATION
Singapore
DIMENSIONS
Variable
MATERIALS
Eggplants, Metal Prongs
VENUE
National Gallery Singapore, Singapore
GENRE
Ephemeral Installation

THEMES & MATERIALS

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