Image: Installation photo of the exhibition 'Tanah Merdeka' (2023) by the artist collective Taring Padi at Framer Framed, Amsterdam. Photo: (c) Maarten van Haaff / Framer Framed
29 February – 25 May 2024
Taring Padi are a leading Indonesian art collective with a mission to understand the cultural and social history of Indonesia through a contemporary lens. Based in Yogyakarta, they use art as a tool to explore issues of sovereignty to overcome environmental destruction, violence, food shortages and unemployment. Taring Padi’s interdisciplinary practice spans art, music, and theatre and has seen them included in exhibitions internationally, including Tanah Merdeka at Framer Framed, in The Netherlands in 2023, and documenta fifteen in Germany in 2022.
From March to May 2024, Griffith University Art Museum will host Taring Padi: Tanah Tumpah Darah. As part of this project, Taring Padi will undertake a residency and suite of public programs in collaboration with proppaNOW, one of Australia’s most important Aboriginal art collectives, and develop a public art banner project together.
The exhibition’s title Tanah Tumpah Darah takes its title from a poetic phrase loosely meaning the emotions generated by remembering one’s motherland that was popularised during the Indonesian revolution and declaration of independence in 1945. The Indonesian left employed the phrase as an ideological framework during land disputes (sengketa agraria) against feudalistic land ownership systems and Western investments until 1965. However, under the military dictatorship of Soeharto (1966-1998), the phrase became an empty slogan in the annual ceremony of Indonesian Independence.
More recently, “Tanah Tumpah Darah” has been reclaimed as a common chant of contemporary Indonesian activists in campaigns against land grabbing and deforestation across the archipelago, a core aspect of Taring Padi’s cultural and political activities since its formation in 1998.
Through learning and working together with diverse communities, Taring Padi understands that people have spiritual, cultural, social and economic connections with the lands, territories and resources they inhabit. This wisdom necessitates struggle and fans the flame of solidarity action that continues collectively with proppaNOW in 2024.

Installation photo from the exhibition Tanah Merdeka (2023) of the artist collective Taring Padi at Framer Framed, Amsterdam. Photo: © maarten Nauw / Framer Framed.
Further Reading on Taring Padi
Framer Framed
Podcast
Art in Solidarity - Taring Padi’s 25-Year Artistic Evolution
In this podcast, two of the founding members, Alexander Supartono and Muhammad ‘Ucup’ Yusuf examine how Taring Padi's large-scale banners, wayang kardus, and woodcut prints are catalysts for change, driving conversations on social justice and solidarity.
Video
Hestu Setu Legi on the making of ‘Retomar Nossa Terra / Rebut Tanah Kita’ (2023) by Taring Padi
Articles
(un)Common Grounds: Reflecting on documenta fifteen
- Alexander Supartono
- Eyal Weizman
- Esther Captain
- Benjamin Seroussi
- Christa-Maria Lerm Hayes
- Florian Cramer
- Other Ways of documenta-ing - Opening talk Jonas Staal
- Other Ways of documenta-ing - Panel
- Other Ways of documenta-ing - Panel II
Taring Padi Website
Dr Wulan Dirgantoro and Dr Elly Kent - Art and Offence
Podcast
Hosted by Dr Jemma Purdey, the podcast Talking Indonesia examines Taring Padi at documenta 15 with Dr Wulan Dirgantoro and Dr Elly Kent.
Kent and Dirgantoro also wrote on the controversy: We need to talk! Art, offence and politics in Documenta 15
Taring Padi Interview with Kate Brown
‘We Take Ownership and Responsibility’
Indonesian Collective Taring Padi Reflects on the Controversy Over Their Art That Paralyzed Documenta
documenta fifteen
Artist Statement
Taring Padi, Statement by Taring Padi on dismantling People’s Justice, 2022.
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Symposium: Taring Padi x proppaNOW | Opening Event
On March 2 2024 we hosted an in-depth discussion with Indonesian collective Taring Padi, Queensland's renowned Aboriginal artist collective proppaNOW and significant international and national curators, writers, and artists. Interested artists, students, researchers, and academics are invited to attend and contribute to a dynamic dialogue on collective aesthetics, sovereignty, and interdisciplinarity.
Keynote speakers: Dr Alexander Supartono (Taring Padi/Edinburgh Napier University) Warraba Weatherall and Shannon Brett (proppaNOW)
This was followed by our free opening celebration