LABEL: Soe Yu Nwe's Collection works
In Soe Yu Nwe's works, the female body is often fragmented and transformed into visceral, semi-botanical sculptures. They resemble vessels formed from tangled thorn bushes or skeletal rib cages, overgrown with weeds and flowers. In more recent works, spherical pagodas with pointed rooftops contribute to the growing number of symbolic references to Buddhism and the temples of Yangon.
The serpent is significant personally and symbolically, representing transformation and sexuality, and drawing on the folklore of her country. In Myanmar, the goddess of serpent dragons is Naga Mae-Daw, often venerated in the country’s numerous pagoda temples. Said to be of pre-Buddhist origin, she rules over magical spirits known as Nagas, transformative snake-like beings that live in rivers, lakes, oceans and in the bottom of wells.
Painted wooden idols representing gods, goddesses and mythical beings; pagoda temples; marionettes; the heart-shaped leaves of the Bodhi tree; and ‘spirit houses’ — shrines built to placate the spirits of trees, forests and mountains that have been disrupted by human habitation — all inspire her practice.
Connected objects
Naga Maedaw serpent 2018
- SOE YU NWE - Creator
Related artists
SOE YU NWE
1989
- present
Full profile for SOE YU NWE