Periuk Buaya
Microfibrillated Cellulose (MFC), wheat straw, charcoal & bulrush seeds10 x 40 x 7 cm
Piece commisioned by Migrant Ecologies Projects
2024
Periuk Buaya (‘Crocodile Pots’ in Malay) is a series of pots that will help germinate the seeds that came from the interior of a Singaporean crocodile over 136-years-old while seeking to recover the stories behind the spirit of this animal.
The 4.7m crocodile was shot by a colonial hunter and displayed at the Raffles Museum now the Singapore Natural History Museum. According to a 1948 article in The Straits Times, it’s believed that the crocodile hosts the spirit of a historic figure: Panglima Ah Chong. Described as part ‘Robin Hood’, ‘Rasputin’ and Taoist/Malay world mystic, Ah Chong was a migrant Chinese, tin mine Kongsi head and anti-colonial freedom-fighter. In 2013, when the museum decided to repair the crocodile, they discovered that it was stuffed with a mixture of imported straw consisting of wheat and rye alongside other plant and flower materials. From within the straw Lucy Davis, founder of Migrant Ecologies Projects found a series of potentially living, wheat and rye grains, as well as other, as-yet-unidentified plant and flower seeds.
Now, with the help of the farmers Magnus Selenius and Embla Lindblad from Nyby Gård, the recovered seeds will try to grow and cultivate a ’crocodile meadow’ in Espoo, Finland.