Tag: Iskandar Jalil

  • Mahaguru Tembikar, Iskandar Jalil, Terima Ijazah Kehormat Doktor Persuratan NTU

    Mahaguru Tembikar, Iskandar Jalil, Terima Ijazah Kehormat Doktor Persuratan NTU

    Pakar tembikar tersohor Singapura, Iskandar Jalil, yang biasa dan mesra dipanggil ‘Cikgu Iskandar’, kini boleh memakai gelaran ‘Dr Iskandar’ pula!

    Ini apabila beliau menerima Ijazah Kehormat Doktor Persuratan (D.Litt) dari Universiti Teknologi Nanyang (NTU), sebagai mengiktiraf pencapaiannya dalam seni tembikar dan khidmat cemerlang beliau dalam bidang pendidikan.

    Pengiktirafan itu disampaikan pada hari pertama majlis konvokesyen NTU hari ini (25 Jul).

    Ini merupakan pengiktirafan tertinggi dan terkini buat pakar seramik itu yang sebelum ini dijulang dengan Pingat Budaya, Bintang Bakti Masyarakat, dan Darjah Matahari Terbit dari Maharaja Jepun.

    Iskandar Jalil bersama Duta Jepun ke Singapura, Haruhisa Takeuchi. (Gambar: Loke Kok Fai) 

    TEMBIKAR BELIAU DISIMPAN ORANG KENAMAAN

    “Ijazah Kehormat ini satu kejutan manis. Saya tidak mengejar anugerah mahupun gelaran. Namun saya tahu dan hargai betapa tingginya pengiktirafan ini. Saya berasa begitu terharu dan rendah diri diberi penganugerahan ini oleh NTU,” kata Dr Iskandar.

    Sejak tahun 1970-an, hasil seni Encik Iskandar menyerikan banyak ruang muzium dan awam.

    Malah ia turut menjadi pilihan bagi menghiasi ruang orang-orang kenamaan termasuk mantan Presiden Singapura Wee Kim Wee, mantan Perdana Menteri Singapura Lee Kuan Yew, Sultan Brunei, mantan Presiden Amerika George Bush, mantan Gabenor Hong Kong dan Koleksi Seni Presiden di Istana Singapura.

    Encik Iskandar pernah memupuk ramai bakat seni muda dan sudah berjaya menerusi kegiatan mengajar di pelbagai institusi.

    Encik Iskandar juga memainkan peranan penting menubuhkan kemudahan membuat tembikar dan bengkel-bengkel bagi kumpulan-kumpulan seperti Persatuan Paraplegik Singapura, Jalan Bahar Clay Studio dan Pusat Warisan Melayu di Kampong Glam.

    SOKONG PARA PELAJAR DALAMI PEMBELAJARAN

    Beliau turut menyokong para pelajar dalam pameran-pameran tembikar dan program-program pertukaran budaya di luar negara supaya mereka dapat mendalaminya.

    “(Dengan) pengiktirafan ini, boleh saya katakan pemerintah dan institusi pengajian tinggi mengakui bahawa ada peluang, ada masa depan untuk mereka kalau mereka berdedikasi untuk pelajaran,” kata Encik Iskandar.

    “Saya juga berasa sangat terdorong kerana ia bermakna institusi-institusi kini menjadi lebih sedar tentang seni tembikar dan perkembangannya. Sungguh meyakinkan untuk mengetahui bahawa akan ada sokongan bagi generasi tembikar seterusnya dan untuk murid-murid saya,” ujar beliau lagi.

    Cikgu Iskandar menyertai Maktab Latihan Perguruan (kini NIE) untuk menjadi guru matematik dan sains pada tahun 1960.

    Iskandar Jalil. (Gambar: BERITAMediacorp)

    Beliau kemudian menjadi antara segelintir sahaja orang yang mendapat bukan satu, tetapi dua Biasiswa Rancangan Colombo.

    Bagi biasiswa pertama, beliau mendalami bidang tekstil, dan bagi biasiswa kedua pula Pak Iskandar mendalami kejuruteraan seramik di Jepun. Dari situlah bermulanya perjalanan sepanjang hayat beliau dalam bidang tembikar, pendidikan dan hubungan kebudayaan beliau dengan Jepun.

    IJAZAH KONVOKESYEN NTU 2016

    Dr Iskandar menjadi antara penerima ulung dalam majlis konvokesyen NTU tahun ini, di mana lebih 9,100 lulusan akan menerima ijazah masing-masing.

    Satu tinjauan universiti itu menunjukkan 70 peratus siswazah tahun ini berjaya mendapatkan pekerjaan sebelum tamat pengajian mereka.

    Kadar itu sama seperti kohort tamat pengajian tahun lalu tetapi lebih tinggi berbanding kohort dalam tahun sebelumnya.

    Source: http://berita.mediacorp.sg

  • Habib Hassan, Hj Mohd Alami Dan Iskandar Jalil Antara Penerima Anugerah Pingat Jasa Gemilang

    Habib Hassan, Hj Mohd Alami Dan Iskandar Jalil Antara Penerima Anugerah Pingat Jasa Gemilang

    Mei lalu Imam Masjid Ba’alwie Habib Hassan Muhammad Al-Attas menerima kejutan manis apabila jasa beliau kepada usaha Pertubuhan Antara Agama (IRO) diberi penghargaan dalam satu majlis di Istana.

    Semasa sambutan Hari Kebangsaan baru-baru ini beliau sekali lagi menerima kejutan manis apabila disertakan dalam senarai penerima Anugerah Hari Kebangsaan tahun ini.

    Habib Hassan merupakan salah seorang daripada 13 jasawan awam yang dikurniakan Pingat Jasa Gemilang.

    Turut menerima pingat itu tahun ini ialah Presiden Majlis Ugama Islam Singapura (Muis), Haji Mohd Alami dan pakar tembikar, Encik Iskandar Jalil.

    Anugerah Hari Kebangsaan mengiktiraf jasa dan sumbangan warga kepada negara.

    Tahun ini, seramai 3,888 individu menerima Anugerah Hari Kebangsaan yang dibahagikan kepada 15 kategori anugerah.

     

    Source: http://beritaharian.sg

  • Ismail Kassim: A Tribute To Iskandar Jalil

    Ismail Kassim: A Tribute To Iskandar Jalil

    From the Land of the Rising Sun, a fitting recognition of Iskandar’s contribution to the world of pottery. Congratulations. Two nights ago he received the Order of the Rising Sun Gold Rays with Rosette by the Japanese Ambassador to Singapore.

    Although the potter lives practically a stone’s throw from my sister’s place in Kembangan where my father also lives and I know his younger brother, Rahim, we never met until I joined a 12 day tour of Iran organized by friends from campus days.

    It was on the long dusty bus ride from Tehran to Kermanshah that I finally came face to face with the potter in the flesh – Iskandar Jalil, small-built, short, wiry and tanned, but warm and down-to-earth.

    Early next morning I saw him standing by the bus, dressed in a thin cotton T-shirt, track pants, sneakers, while others were holding tight to their jackets, as the cold spring winds swirled around us.

    ‘’Doesn’t he feel the cold?’’ I casually asked his wife, Saleha. She replied: ‘’He is always like that, quite immune to the cold.’’ I told myself that this potter might have been an Eskimo in his previous life.

    A few days later, while touring the ruins of Persepolis – once the capital of the mighty Persian Empire – I noticed the care that he took taking shots from his small but upmarket Sony digital camera, often giving instructions to Saleha on how to pose or how to take shots of him.

    I asked him on his photography and he let me view images from his camera; I would see the touch of professionalism reflected in the tightness of the composition and the attention given to perspective. In Malay, you say: ‘’ada standard lah.’’ (high standard )

    Next, I noticed he always had a tightly packed haversack on his back from which he often drew out a big, thick, black dairy-like notebook, to write. I was curious and on one occasion peeped over his shoulder; in big bold letters he was writing down the name of the place in addition to sketching the entrance. They took up almost the entire page.

    I told myself these are signs of ‘’a big heart and a bold spirit.’’

    On the second last day as the bus was taking us back to Tehran from Isfahan, except for the potter, the rest of us were slumped against our seat, a little weary and possibly a little home-sick.

    Iskandar, born in 1940 and could be considered as our ‘’abang ’’ (elder brother) was going round tirelessly from seat to seat with his big black notebook.

    Finally, he came to me and handing over his book, said: ‘’Ismail, can I have your name, address, e-mail and phone numbers.’’

    He was the only one in our party who did it.

    Toward the end of Iran tour, I told Saleha that I had heard much talk about their newly renovated home. The result was an open invitation for tea.

    After much procrastination, I finally asked Jailani who was also on the tour to arrange. He too needed a little prodding, before he rang up and that was how he and I, and his wife, Aminahton, ended up being graciously treated to a tour of the house.

    All I could remember is the minimalist-style, hardly any furniture except for basic wooden stuff and lots of artefacts from his travels and pots, big and small, in varying patterns, scattered all over.

    When it was time to say good-bye, the potter took out two small bowls from the cupboard – one dark black, the other light tan – and placed them on the table before us. He then took one in each hand, raised it to eye level and then threw them on the floor with some force.

    They landed with a loud thud, rolled a little and then remained still, intact. He picked them up and placed them on the table and asked us to examine the bowls.

    We were stunned, speechless. Incredible, there was not even a whiff of a hairline crack. ‘’They are almost unbreakable – a matter of heating technique,’’ he said.

    Added the potter: ‘’Take one each. Decide who wants what.’’

    I gestured to Jailani and he slowly reached out for the light one. I was happy to take the dark one. So unexpected, so generous, and I felt a little overwhelmed.

    Today, the bowl is prominently displayed in my study, perched securely on the topmost shelf above my writing table, flanked by a Sufi book and a Qigong book.

    Note: This is an extract from a longer piece, titled – My friend, Iskandar the great potter – that I wrote in 2011 and posted on my now defunct Nohardfeelings blog at WordPress..
    A gift from Iskandar

    A gift from Iskandar

     

     

    Source: Ismail Kassim

  • Iskandar Jalil First Singaporean Artist To Receive Prestigious Japanese Award

    Iskandar Jalil First Singaporean Artist To Receive Prestigious Japanese Award

    Renowned local potter Iskandar Jalil was conferred the Order of the Rising Sun, Gold Rays with Rosette by the Japanese Ambassador to Singapore Haruhisa Takeuchi on Tuesday (Jun 9).

    Twelve Singaporeans have received the award since 1967, but Mr Iskandar is the first local artist to receive the prestigious award. The award bestowed by the Emperor of Japan, recognises Mr Iskandar’s contributions, through pottery, in building cultural exchange and mutual understanding between Japan and Singapore for over 40 years.

    “He has been a friend of Japan for so many years, and we are also very much appreciative of his work and his attitude to the younger generation – to inspire the younger artists to try to do their best,” said Mr Haruhisa Takeuchi. “It is very much a delight for us (to confer this award), and a privilege as well.

    “Over the years, he’s been a frequent visitor to the potteries in Japan, and through his activities both in Japan and Singapore, there has been happy interaction between the two cultures through pottery. So I think that’s been very significant.”

    But in his acceptance speech, Mr Iskandar said the focus should be less on winning awards, and more on creating a new generation of artists.

    He added that the way in which pottery and crafts are taught needs to be changed – urging young artists to not just dabble in the craft, but to take on apprenticeships lasting 30 or 40 years. “There is no shortcut. You work with a master potter, with the university, and you improve a lot that way. But it takes a long time,” he said.
    “If we Singaporeans are in a hurry, it’s difficult for them to understand then and achieve what they want. Whereas in Japan, you have to learn the basics. There is always the rule, the methodology, the way it should be done.”

    The Japanese ambassador and Mr Iskandar with their spouses and Minister of State for Culture Community and Youth Sam Tan, with the Patent of Decoration. (Photo: Loke Kok Fai)

    Mr Iskandar also hoped that people and institutions would be able to appreciate people for their potential, rather than forcing them into fields they cannot perform in. “It’s about understanding what the material can do for us, then can it be successful. We should understand our students, what they can do, what they should do.”

     

    Source: www.channelnewsasia.com