The Spirit of Nature
By Della Butcher
Jimmy Quek had polio at the age of 3. The slight limp that is left is
almost imperceptible, but it would appear that the effect the restriction
caused in his early years channelled this sensitive boy in a direction
which may not otherwise have happened.
At the age of 8, he began to excel in art and was taken by his cousin,
Low Pua Hwa (a fine watercolour artist) to an exhibition of paintings.
He was so impressed, that without really knowing at the time, he was
directed towards painting by a compelling need which has been with
him ever since.
Gaining A1 results in art, he became Chairman of his school Art Society
and at 16 won an award in the Art Festival for Youth. A year later he
joined the Nanyang Academy of Fine Art to leave after only a few
months to take up Business Studies at the Ngee Ann Technical College.
Working in an administrative capacity for three years he then joined a
design company as an accounts executive, then design manager, after
which he ran his own design company which flourished for four years.
However, the need for a more fulfilling expression was his striving
waking motivation and at the age of 29 he joined La Salle where he was
immediately accepted into the second year of a three-year course. He
is now a winner of six awards, the most important being first prize of
the IBM Art Award in 1988.
He has paintings in the the private collections of statesmen, diplomats,
a king, a ruler, a sultan, in the National Museum, International
companies and in the homes of art lovers throughout the world.
At his first solo exhibition in 1987 Jimmy Quek (Prabhakara) made this
statement "It is important to be prepared to change - to free the mind
each time - not to attach too much importance to previous ideas".
Those of us who knew him then will be aware that he has followed his
belief.
Here we have indeed an exhibition of "The Spirit of Nature". Jimmy has
experimented with shades of light and colour evoking the dreamlike
quality in many of his works and reality in others, this reality being
related to the abstract.
Jimmy does not limit himself to one style, yet his paintings are
unmistakably and distinctly his own. He invades the sensitivities of the
viewer with a provocative combination of movement and vivacity of
colour and lights, creating a superb mixture of poetic images, evoking a
deep satisfaction, be it excitement or tranquillity.
The collection of paintings can be likened to a lesson. The viewer is also
the participant and becomes enlightened to the myriad colour which
exist in nature - the purple and pink of twilight, deep, almost sinister
darkness of ravines in mountain ranges - light water reflections - the
bright sparkling power of sunlight - colours of which we would
previously be unaware. The changing transience of movement of water,
evaporating mists and a million other things of natural beauty which
are interpreted by delicate impressionism of powerful statements.
Jimmy signs his paintings "Prabhakara" which is his Sanskrit name, the
interpretation of which means "Source of Light", and we have here
more than 40 pieces of that source of light in the Spirit of Nature.
1990
The text is extracted from an Exhibition Catalogue "The Spirit of Nature by
Prabhakara", an exhibition of paintings from 16 May to 31 May 1990.