Artist Martin Brown depicts the world’s most ‘Kickin’ cities, exploring how traditions and old school values are continually expressed and survive in modern urban centers. In this Jakarta exhibition the artist has put out five years worth of work in >More
An exhibition that was put together to retell the story of colonial Indonesia. This event was conceptualized by Noorderlicht, a famous photography institute in the Netherlands as an investigative-style photography exhibition that compares globalization through the commodity of sugar. Sounds >More
No one will deny that THE Louis Vuitton Monogram has reached iconic status. People see the Monogram in a different light, and through the eyes of six talented and rising photographers around the region, we will see what the Monogram >More
A somber audio and visual feast. “Aftermath” is a collection of images taken during Indonesia’s moments of despair. It chronicles tsunami-struck Aceh all the way to the explosion of Mount Merapi in Yogyakarta, visitors are transported back into a slur >More
Born in France, Phillipe Ramette is a sculptor and photographer born in the 60s. Phillipe creates objects that tell a story of the creative process. He’s credited for the popular ‘Point de vue’, an installation that got rave reviews when >More
An event based around a very versatile material, Plastic Culture grabbed the Jakarta art scene’s imagination and delivered a successful event titled ‘Toy Life’, a photographic exhibition held between May 19 to 27. The idea here was to bring your >More
Wait, wait, stop right there, smile and click!” Those are the words, we often hear when we want to capture a moment as an image. Our whole society is now exposed to photography which has naturally become a sizeable part >More
Travel photographer Martin Westlake recently launched his book called ‘Eastward’ a photographic tribute to the story of his ongoing journey and discovery in this part of the world. Travelling to Indonesia for the first time in the 80s, Martin immediately >More
The French coined the expression ‘joi de vivre’ which translates into the “joy of living” and for the regular city bloke stuck in the daily humdrums of the Jakarta life, Tropicsence was the event to be at. Why? This was >More