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A tall, narrow composition depicts a quiet scene of care. In the foreground, a young woman sits in a woven chair, her body turned slightly while her face meets us with a relaxed expression. Her long dark hair falls loose behind a white blouse, and her hands rest in her lap over a brown batik sarong. Behind her, a second woman bends forward, gently parting and arranging the seated woman’s hair. Both figures wear soft white garments that catch the light against a smoky field of browns, olive grays, and muted rose. At the lower right, a hen settles near a shallow basket with several pale chicks gathered nearby. The brushwork is loose and atmospheric, with softened edges and a haze of color that makes the scene feel remembered. The image feels full of touch with fingers in hair, fabric against skin, feathers against wicker, and bodies sharing a private space.

That intimacy is what makes the painting so compelling. Indonesian artist Trubus Soedarsono turns two everyday moments into a meditation on nurturing. The women are absorbed in an ordinary act of grooming, patience, and companionship. The hen and chicks below quietly mirror that same theme, creating a visual rhyme between human care and animal care. Painted in 1960, the work also belongs to a fascinating chapter in Indonesian art, when painters were helping define a modern national culture after independence. Trubus had studied with major figures such as S. Sudjojono and Affandi, was active in revolutionary-era artist circles, created anti-Dutch propaganda posters, and later taught at the Indonesian Academy of Fine Arts in Yogyakarta. Knowing that history gives this gentle image extra depth as an artist shaped by political struggle paints softness, domesticity, and emotional closeness. The result is memorable precisely because it is so understated. Nothing dramatic happens, yet the painting holds attention through tenderness, elegant vertical design, and a quiet insistence that ordinary care is worthy of art.

A tall, narrow composition depicts a quiet scene of care. In the foreground, a young woman sits in a woven chair, her body turned slightly while her face meets us with a relaxed expression. Her long dark hair falls loose behind a white blouse, and her hands rest in her lap over a brown batik sarong. Behind her, a second woman bends forward, gently parting and arranging the seated woman’s hair. Both figures wear soft white garments that catch the light against a smoky field of browns, olive grays, and muted rose. At the lower right, a hen settles near a shallow basket with several pale chicks gathered nearby. The brushwork is loose and atmospheric, with softened edges and a haze of color that makes the scene feel remembered. The image feels full of touch with fingers in hair, fabric against skin, feathers against wicker, and bodies sharing a private space. That intimacy is what makes the painting so compelling. Indonesian artist Trubus Soedarsono turns two everyday moments into a meditation on nurturing. The women are absorbed in an ordinary act of grooming, patience, and companionship. The hen and chicks below quietly mirror that same theme, creating a visual rhyme between human care and animal care. Painted in 1960, the work also belongs to a fascinating chapter in Indonesian art, when painters were helping define a modern national culture after independence. Trubus had studied with major figures such as S. Sudjojono and Affandi, was active in revolutionary-era artist circles, created anti-Dutch propaganda posters, and later taught at the Indonesian Academy of Fine Arts in Yogyakarta. Knowing that history gives this gentle image extra depth as an artist shaped by political struggle paints softness, domesticity, and emotional closeness. The result is memorable precisely because it is so understated. Nothing dramatic happens, yet the painting holds attention through tenderness, elegant vertical design, and a quiet insistence that ordinary care is worthy of art.

“Woman with Chicks” by Trubus Soedarsono (Indonesian) - Oil on canvas / 1960 - National Gallery Singapore #WomenInArt #TrubusSoedarsono #NationalGallerySingapore #IndonesianArt #NationalGallery #art #arttext #arte #BlueskyArt #portraitfwomen #IndonesianArtist #AsianArt #SoutheastAsianArt #1960sArt

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