Please reload and retry in a moment.
Please reload and retry in a moment.
17th Sep 2009
Htein Lin was born in 1966 in Mezaligon, a village north of Henzada in Burma s northern Irrawaddy Delta, where his family owned a small sawmill. He began painting and performing while still at school, and continued at Rangoon University while studying for a law degree, a subject he chose for its performance possibilities. In March 1988, he was one of a number of Rangoon University students who were expelled for protesting the authorities failure to properly investigate the death of fellow student Phone Maw. These protests were the first step that led to the democracy spring in August/September 1988 that preceded the clampdown by the military that remain in power today.
After leading the protests in Mezaligon during that period, Htein Lin joined many other activists and fled to the Indian border where he joined the All Burma Students Democratic Front (ABDSF). While in exile he studied painting for a couple of months under Mandalay artist Sitt Nyein Aye, and illustrated the ABSDF s publications. In 1990 the Indian government informed the ABSDF that they could no longer stay on Indian territory if they carried arms. Htein Lin left for an ABSDF camp inside Burma which was shortly afterwards overrun by the Burmese army. Carrying a typewriter, Htein Lin crossed the jungles of Northern Burma to join their comrades in Kachin State on the Chinese border, using a stick to draw in the mud during breaks in the journey.
Only about twenty of them survived the journey. In late 1991, he was caught up in the internal conflicts in the ABSDF and along with 80 fellow students he was imprisoned and tortured for allegedly being an informer. Some 20 of his comrades were summarily executed on 12 February 1992 or died from torture. The others were kept in captivity for seven months, until they escaped to China, where they were caught and handed back to the Burmese military government. They were permitted to officially surrender and Htein Lin resumed his L.L.B. law course, graduating in 1994.
Rather than continue in law, he worked as an artist and comic film actor, and pioneered modern performance art in Burma with The Little Worm in the Ear , a street performance in downtown Yangon (1996) and Guitarist (1996). His first solo exhibitions were held in 1996 and 1997 in Rangoon (Yangon) and he participated in several group shows.
In 1998, he was arrested and sentenced to 7 years imprisonment, charged on the basis of an intercepted letter from an erstwhile 'comrade' which listed names of thoseto be contacted to see if they were still interested in opposition activity. He was unaware of the letter until his arrest. After sentence, he was transferred to Mandalay Jail, where he was forced to improvise to continue painting. Using the white cotton prison uniform as a canvas, he paid for paints to be smuggled into the jail. In the absence of brushes, he used his fingers, cigarette lighters, syringes, carved soap, and dinner plates to make his mark. In Mandalay he performed a piece 0 + 0 + 0 = 0 (1999) for the amusement of his fellow prisoners.
Conditions in Mandalay jail were particularly harsh, and in 2000 political prisoners in protested for better conditions, including in Htein Lin s case, the right to paint. The protesters were beaten and dispersed to other jails and he was sent to Myaungmya in the Irrawaddy Delta, a small town where George Orwell spent three miserable months on his first posting as a colonial police officer. Htein Lin was punished with seven months spent in solitary confinement on death row in the jail, built by the British in 1900.Happily conditions in Myaungmya were not as bad as Mandalay for most of the time, and it was not far from his hometown. Once out of solitary he continued to paint, using the same techniques and materials he had developed in Mandalay. He also developed three more performances The Fly (2001), Cleaner (2002) and Life (2003).
His 4th solo show Recycled in December 2005, in Lokanat Gallery included the four Other World paintings and 16 paintings on recycled cardboard. It was accompanied by a daily performance Standstill , comprising four hours of standing meditation in sympathy with those who are unable to move because of disability, or for other reasons. His 5th Solo Show, Come Rain or Shine , at River Gallery, Strand Hotel in June 2006 included three huge canvases, and nine painted monk s umbrellas, amongst other recent works.
In May 2005, Htein Lin and fellow performer Chaw Ei Thein and three others were detained for five days for questioning following the street performance Mobile Art Gallery and Mobile Market in downtown Rangoon. In September 2005 he performed The Fly at the Alliance Francaise, Rangoon; followed later by Rangoon performances of On the Table and Artist s Life with Chaw Ei Thein, and We have arrived in the world , a group performance.
Htein Lin sees himself as an artist, not a political activist. But while he regards art used in the service of politics as something that insults the value of both, he believes political events can inspire art, and those events can sometimes even swallow up an artist. When the artist emerges, he will be changed by the experience, and thereby become the painting, and no longer the painter.
Media coverage
The Works, Hong Kong TV, 1 April (Scroll to the bottom for the windows media player or real player link)
South China Morning Post, 23 March
Democratic Voice of Burma TV (Burmese), 14 March, Part 2 of News (after 45 secs) (see DVBTV on YouTube), and performance 'Yes or No'
Irrawaddy Magazine (Burmese), 17 March
Inside Time (UK prison magazine), January
Himal Magazine, February, March
2007 Media Coverage
BBCTV4, World Service TV 25Jul07 (video)
Coolhunter The Times, 21Jul07
Myanmar Times 23-29Jul07
New Statesman 26Jul07
Sunday Times 29Jul07
Guardian Weekly 1Aug07
The Economist 2Aug07
El Pais 4Aug07
New York Times 13Aug07
International Herald Tribune 13Aug07
Il Manifesto 14Aug07
Time Out (Exhibition of the Week), 31Aug07
Channel 4 News,27Sept07 (on the current crisis)
Work with Barrowhill Junior School