Join us for an evening conversation on the occasion of Marcos Kueh’s first institutional solo exhibition, 'Smooth Sailing, 一路順風', at esea contemporary. Taking its title from a Chinese parting blessing, the exhibition reflects on journeys, memory, and the afterlives of migration — tracing how textiles hold both the weight of exploitation and the promise of solidarity.
The artist Marcos Kueh will be in conversation with Amy George, Senior Curator of Collections, Textiles & Wallpaper at the Whitworth, University of Manchester, and Dr Vera Mey, Asia Triennial Manchester 6 Curatorial Research Fellow at Manchester School of Art. Moderated by Jo-Lene Ong, curator at esea contemporary, the discussion will take us through Kueh’s process in developing this major new work — from researching collections at The Whitworth and the People’s History Museum during his residency at esea contemporary, to expanding his practice into sculptural and kinetic forms. Together, the conversation will reflect on how his evolving practice meditates on endurance, abandonment, and fragile hope, suggesting diaspora as an act of cultural repair and imagination.
Anchoring these ideas is Kueh’s new installation, a sculptural tableau of persistence and loss: a fractured sail and mast recalling migration and rupture, an embroidery machine labouring endlessly in solitude, and fabric remnants bearing well-wishing talismans and faded emblems of work. Through this poetic assemblage, 'Smooth Sailing, 一路順風' contemplates how acts of making might hold space for both exploitation and solidarity — for what has been broken, and what might still be repaired.
Marcos Kueh is an artist from Sarawak, Borneo Malaysia, currently living and working in the Netherlands. His practice centres on textiles as a medium for storytelling, drawing from Borneo’s ancestral weaving traditions to explore themes of identity, labour, and globalisation.
Growing up in a post-colonial developing country, Kueh has long been engaged with questions of identity and how Malaysia is perceived – whether through colonial depictions in museums or stylised narratives in tourism advertising. His work seeks to reconcile these representations with his lived experience growing up in Borneo, navigating the pressures of modernity and globalisation. He uses weaving to encode contemporary legends from everyday life, just as the ancestors of Borneo did with their dreams and stories before the arrival of written alphabets from the West.
Kueh holds a Bachelor’s in Graphic and Textile Design from the Royal Academy of Art, The Hague, completed in 2022. That same year, he was awarded the Ron Mandos Young Blood Award, and in 2023 he was named Young Designer of the Year by the Dutch Design Awards. His works are held in the collections of Museum Voorlinden and the Stedelijk Museum Amsterdam. Recent exhibitions include Manifesta 15 in Barcelona; Kunstinstituut Melly in Rotterdam; The Backroom, Kuala Lumpur; and the National Art Gallery Malaysia in Kuala Lumpur.
Amy George is Senior Curator of Collections, Textiles & Wallpaper at the Whitworth, University of Manchester. Her curatorial expertise pans ancient Andean textiles, textiles from South Asia, mid-century wallpaper, and contemporary practice. She has curated exhibitions,published research, and presented internationally, and recently led the acquisition of the ABC Wax archive—the UK’s largest surviving complete textile design archive. Amy’s practice combines art and design history with social narratives, using material culture and textile archives to engage diverse audiences and reframe museum collections for the present.
Dr Vera Mey is an art historian and independent curator. She was awarded her PhD from SOAS, University of London. Most recently, she was Co-Artistic Director of the Busan Biennale 2024. Mey co-founded the scholarly journal ‘Southeast of Now: Directions in Contemporary and Modern Art in Asia’ (National University of Singapore Press) and was part of the research colloquium ‘The Color Curtain and the Promise of Bandung’ organised by the Hochschule für Bildende Künste–Städelschule, Frankfurt, and the UC Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive, California. She was on the founding curatorial team of the NTU Centre for Contemporary Art Singapore, where she led the Residencies Programme. More recently, as an independent curator, she has co-curated and curated exhibitions in Bangkok, Berlin, New Zealand, Paris, Phnom Penh, Shanghai, Singapore, and Tokyo.