Tang Chang


Tang Chang was a self-taught artist, poet, writer and philosopher of Sino-Thai heritage. He was one of well-known Thai poet and artist.

Biography

He was born on 1 May 1934 to a poor, Chinese family in the area of the Somdet Chao Phraya Market, Thonburi, across the river from Bangkok. As a young boy, he studied at the Pitchaya Yatikaram Temple School, until the effects of World War II on his family’s financial situation forced him to end his education.
After Chang left school, he developed an interest in artistic expression and used found pieces of charcoal and chalk to draw on the streets and the walls of his home. With funds received from his work as a menial labourer, he bought paper, paint and pencils and with these began drawing portraits of his family members and neighbours. He continued this practice until he was able to open a stall at a local market to undertake portraits professionally. After that, Chang began painting watercolour landscapes of the areas around his house. In 1960, one of these paintings, a landscape featuring the house of Pratuang Emjaoren, a well-known Thai artist and a close friend of Chang’s, became the first of his works to be included in an exhibition.
In the late 1950s, Chang began producing the first of his gestural abstraction paintings for which he is best known. According to the artist, these paintings were the result of a series of experimentations undertaken with the aim of developing a style that reflected Buddhist and Daoist principles, while also offering an alternative to the cubistic and impressionistic works that dominated Thai art circles of the period. These works were exhibited for the first time in 1966 at the Pratumwan art gallery, but were not received favourably by Thai audiences.
In 1968, when the artist was 34 years old, he self-published a book featuring his ‘concrete poems,’ which dealt with social themes as well as more personal meditations on nature and family life. Unlike his paintings, these works garnered interest from Thai literary circles, gaining popularity within counterculture movements that were gaining traction in the late 1960s and early 1970s.
Throughout his career, Chang positioned himself outside of mainstream art circles dominated by Silpakorn University and its National Exhibition of Art. Instead, he preferred to hold exhibitions of his and his student’s works at his own home. Similarly, Chang generally refused to sell his works, preferring instead to gain income through other means. Chang died in August 1990 at the age of 56, and was survived by his wife, four sons and three daughters.

Arts Exhibition & Poetry

1960

Artist’s Collection of 400 Selected Self-Portraits
21 March – 9 April 2000 at The Mercury Art Gallery, Plernchit, Bangkok.

2001

Chasing, chasing, chasing, chasing after,
Chasing, chasing, chasing, keep on chasing,
Chasing, chasing, chasing, and chasing,
To seize the sun light for his painting.”
25 June – 22 July 2001 at Open Arts Space, The Silom Galleria.

2002

An overview of his lifetime Works is composed of 3 dimensions of his creative endeavours, reflecting his critical views of world.
17 – 30 September 2002 at Marsi Gallery, Suan Pakkad Palace Museum, Bangkok.
1 – 14 October 2002 at 14 October 73 Memorial, Ratchadamnoen Avenue, Bangkok
11 – 26 October 2002 at Pridi Banomyong Institute, Sukhumvit 55, Bangkok.
TRAVELLING EXHIBITS
All the above 3 sets of exhibited Works will be exhibited as the followings:

1960