View from the Top

Born in 1936, Thomas Yeo graduated from Nanyang Academy of Fine Arts in 1960. He then studied in Chelsea School of Art and Hammersmith College of Art and Architecture in London. Since then, Yeo has participated in more than 100 solo and group exhibitions and in 1984, he was awarded the Cultural Medallion. From the mid-1970s onwards, Yeo began to adopt the use of collage in greater depth. In his words, collage was “a liberation from the tyranny of the brush” and he would frequently incorporate different varieties of rice paper in one work. Collage allowed him to continue his interest in abstraction, while finding new ways of depicting pictorial space, and to explore the relationship between formal qualities like plane and ground. Although wholly abstract, the work’s title, as well as angular forms and squarish planes clearly suggest a cityscape and buildings.