We’ve got the sun under our skin is a series of photographs and texts illustrating the incremental effects that colonial literature has on the construction of modern identity. Drawing from...
We’ve got the sun under our skin is a series of photographs and texts illustrating the incremental effects that colonial literature has on the construction of modern identity. Drawing from 20th century British travelogues and ethnographic accounts in Malaya, images are created in response to the stories. Shot entirely in Britain, the photographs function as portrayals of the explorers’ experiences in the Straits Settlements—a mimicry to subvert the orientalist gaze.
Tropic Temper, James Kirkup, 1965: "Something about its green stained yellow rind, and in particular the great spawn of gluey, grey-brown, caviare-like seeds, and the pale, stringy fibres at its cleft heart made me want to throw up."