ArtAsiaPacific

From Seed to Bloom

ince arriving in Cambodia in 1994, Christoph Bendick has, in a number of ways, helped nourish the fledgling arts scene, whether through acquisitions or direct financial aid to artists. As a collector of Western and Asian contemporary art and Asian antiques, Bendick has a rather intuitive and eclectic approach. There are no ideologies involved, no theoretical framework or philosophy, and no art advisers. Rather, it is chance encounters and frequent visits to galleries that, more often than not, lead to purchases. “I do not have a strict concept when acquiring art,” he said to me during our interview in Phnom Penh, where he is based. “My first thought is: what appeals to me, what touches my heart; to what do

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from ArtAsiaPacific

ArtAsiaPacific5 min read
24th Biennale of Sydney Ten Thousand Suns
Consider a bamboo blind and the way it obstructs and concedes light across each corded slat; recall the coolness of a material that does not carry heat quite like concrete or brick. Placed in a climate-controlled museum, the defunct blind-turned-exhi
ArtAsiaPacific2 min read
Itinerary
Yoko Ono: Music of the Mind Tate Modern London Lala Rukh: In the Round Sharjah Art Foundation Sharjah Philippe Parreno: VOICES Leeum Museum of Art Seoul 24th Biennale of Sydney: Ten Thousand Suns Multiple locations Sydney Kimsooja: To Breathe – Const
ArtAsiaPacific2 min read
Tsai ming-liang
On the edge of a quiet river bank a barefooted, red-robed monk presses his heel carefully into the soil. Later, he walks at an inexplicably slow pace across the marble floor of Washington, DC’s iconic Union Station, entirely at odds with the anxious

Related Books & Audiobooks