Yim Maline
By Abigail Bernal
‘11th Asia Pacific Triennial’ August 2024
Yim Maline
Born 1982, Battambang, Cambodia
Lives and works in Siem Reap, Cambodia
In her soft sculptures, Yim Maline transforms non-precious or mundane materials — such as recycled fabric, foam, wire and cardboard — into meticulously crafted objects of ambitious scale that evoke the natural world, from landscapes to plants, animals and fungal organisms. Amorphous shapes with protruding tendrils and padded forms suggest both flowering and decomposition. Yim’s works on paper complement her sculptures in their exploration of biomorphic, organic forms and share their layered, textured sensibility.
The fabrics used by Yim are significant for their association with poverty, migration and waste, and with the environmental damage and pollution caused by throwaway fast fashion and excess packaging. Although her works allude to ongoing conflict and destruction occurring in many parts of the globe, she comments that her investigation of the natural world and our human relationship to it ultimately gives her hope and the encouragement to continue making art.
Yim Maline's Just a branch of flowers and Furniture 2023 (Second-hand fabric, cloth, thread, foam and wire), installed at QAG for the 11th Asia Pacific Triennial, with oil paintings by Yeung Tong Lung seen in the background, October 2024 / Courtesy and © The artists / Photograph: J Ruckli, QAGOMA
Sharing the Wind 2024
- YIM, Maline - Creator