Showing posts with label Taiwan. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Taiwan. Show all posts

20/02/25

Thomas Demand @ Taipei Fine Arts Museum - "The Stutter of History" Retrospective Exhibition

Thomas Demand 
The Stutter of History
Taipei Fine Arts Museum
January 18 — May 11, 2025

THOMAS DEMAND 
The Stutter of History - Exhibition Poster
「托瑪斯.德曼:歷史的結舌」展覽主視覺。
Courtesy of the Taipei Fine Arts Museum

“I guess the core of it is making the world into a model by redoing it and stripping off the anecdotal part, that’s when it becomes an allegory, and the project becomes a metaphor. Making models is a cultural technique—without it we would be blind.”

—Thomas Demand
The retrospective of celebrated German artist Thomas Demand is on view at Taipei Fine Arts Museum (TFAM). The exhibition is co-organized by the Foundation for the Exhibition of Photography, the UCCA Center for Contemporary Art, and TFAM, curated by Douglas Fogle. It brings together nearly 70 of the artist's works from the 1990s to the present, showcasing his 30-year practice at the intersection of sculpture and photography.

Born in Munich in 1964, Thomas Demand studied at the Academy of Fine Arts, Munich and the Düsseldorf Academy of Fine Arts from 1987 to 1992, and earned a master's degree in fine arts from Goldsmiths, University of London, in 1994. Initially, Thomas Demand simply created sculptures with paper and cardboard, while photography originally served as a means to document his works. During the shooting process, he discovered the differences between the physical objects and their flat images captured by the camera lens, leading him to develop a method of constructing objects for the purpose of being photographed. This has subsequently become the primary medium for presenting his creations. Demand reconstructs life-size scenes of seemingly banal images from the mass media using paper and cardboard, and then photograph the scenes to create images similar to the originals. Finally, he destroys the models, leaving behind only large-format photographic prints. In this way, he questions the notion of photography as an absolutely objective or truthful medium and explores the distance between reality and representation. Demand's works have been exhibited in major museums and galleries worldwide. He represented Germany at the 26th São Paulo Biennial (2004), and appeared four times at the Venice Architecture Biennale. In light of his love for models and architecture, it is not surprising that Demand has collaborated over the years with various well-known international architects such as David Chipperfield, Rem Koolhaas, and SANAA, on projects ranging from exhibitions and installations to actual architectural building projects.

The topics of Demand's works often come from news photos of notable historical or social incidents, recreating key moments that have influenced Western or even global situations. His early works address moments of German history that he never personally experienced but learned about through images, such as the bomb-damaged room where Hitler narrowly escaped assassination in 1944 (Raum / Room, 1994), and the film archives of the Nazi-supported filmmaker Leni Riefenstahl (Archiv / Archive, 1995). Additionally, Thomas Demand has reconstructed scenes of major world news events, such as the stack of documents at Donald Trump's press conference before his inauguration as U.S. President in 2017 to prove that he had relinquished control of his businesses (Folders, 2017), the hotel room where the fugitive American National Security Agency whistleblower Edward Snowden originally stayed in Russia (Refuge Series, 2021), the storeroom of the Wildenstein Institute, where 30 paintings and sculptures that had been missing for decades were recovered during a police raid (Vault, 2012), and the abandoned control room of the Fukushima nuclear power plant in the aftermath of Japan’s 2011 Tōhoku earthquake (Kontrollraum / Control Room, 2011).

Throughout his career, Thomas Demand has been interested in our culture’s production and interpretation of “nature,” as well as the division between the artificial and natural worlds. Using over 270,000 paper leaves, he created Clearing (2003), an idyllic forest scene with sunlight streaming through the canopy, reflecting people's unfounded romantic vision of a pure and pristine nature. His work Grotte / Grotto (2006) was made with 36 tons of cardboard. The artist gathered and studied hundreds of postcards of caves sold in gift shops worldwide and built a life-sized grotto with stalactites accumulated over thousands of years. The final photographic version of Grotto becomes an ideal condensation of our collective impression of a cave. This is the only model among Demand's works that has been preserved and is currently on view at the Prada Foundation in Milan. The wall-covering photographic wallpaper work Hanami (2014), which has been installed across the entrance walls of the TFAM’s exhibition galleries, provides viewers with an immersive experience. By recreating countless cherry blossoms out of paper, Demand invites us to contemplate on the fleeting and cyclical nature of life through their ephemeral bloom.

In 2008, Thomas Demand moved from the monumental to personal and quotidian subjects, creating his Dailies series. The artist still employed the same creative methods, transforming images into paper sculptures and then photographing them. However, this series of images came from mobile phone snapshots of banal scenes he encountered daily, such as an empty yogurt cup with a pink plastic spoon left on a shelf, a bar of soap placed on the edge of a sink, a pile of letters spilling out from under a door, and cups inserted into the holes of a chain link fence. The Dailies series is Demand's attempt at creating an autobiographical narrative using ordinary visual elements, and celebrates the subtle and infinite charm of life's minutiae. These works condense his understanding of history: history is not only composed of grand events worldwide but also includes the mundane matters of our individual lives. In light of the popularization of phone-based photographic technology and our culture’s now obsessive sharing of images on social media, the artist's painstaking reproduction of these poetic if unremarkable moments from his own life in his Dailies also asks us to reflect on the outsized importance that these rapidly produced and disseminated images have taken on in contemporary society.

Thomas Demand has also used stop-motion animation in his work to explore the world of moving images. In Pacific Sun (2012), the artist recreated a piece of surveillance camera footage that went viral on the internet depicting a few moments inside a cruise ship cabin as it was hit by rogue waves from a tropical storm off the coast of New Zealand. In this film we see tables, chairs, lockers, paper plates, computer monitors, and other objects slide back and forth whimsically and erratically. Thomas Demand spent months meticulously recreating these chaotic moments frame by frame with paper and cardboard. In Balloons (2018), a string of balloons tied to a red plastic clothespin drifts slowly across a concrete and brick sidewalk, moved lazily by the wind. Only the clothespin and colorful ribbons are visible on the screen, while the balloons themselves float outside the frame, their looming presence marked only by the shadows cast on the ground, moving gracefully as if dancing to an improvised minuet. Accompanied by swaying tree shadows and occasionally by fallen leaves on the ground, the work captures poetic moments of urban life that are often overlooked and incidental.

In 2011, during his residency at the Getty Research Institute in Los Angeles, Thomas Demand began his Model Studies series. Departing from his technique of sculpturally reconstructing existing images of the world, he turned his lens directly on the preparatory paper models of architects and designers, capturing abstract and fragmented elements within them. Whether it was the provisional maquettes of John Lautner, one of the most influential modernist architects in 20th-century America, those created by contemporary architectural firms like SANAA, or the radical paper dress patterns of the fashion designer Azzedine Alaïa, who was famous for his sculptural designs, these images reveal that the world around us is constructed on a foundation of paper. During his exploration of building environments in the visual world, Demand began using his photographic prints as wallpaper to intervene in white cube spaces, adding a spatial depth to the exhibition of his photographic works, as seen in Cones (2018) and Lockers (2018), which fill the walls of two rooms of the exhibition.

Through the ingenious use of paper as a material and the arrangement of light and shadow, Demand's works initially appear similar to documentary images of the real world, but upon closer inspection, reveal themselves to be recreations using paper and cardboard. Based on flat documentary images, Thomas Demand carefully re-construct these scenes out of paper before photographing the models and finally destroying them. Through layers of reproduction and translation between his source images and their final quasi-photographic counterparts, Demand’s ghostly works suggest that even though history lurks in our collective and individual memories in the form of images, there is always a gap in our perception of the so-called truth. Demand's work explores how the fragile texture of paper can become the carrier of images and memories, whether from our daily lives or the larger arc of world historical events. This aspect of Demand’s work highlights the tension between photographic images and the real world while questioning both the inertia of image culture and the paradox of perception.

THOMAS DEMAND (b. 1964, Munich, lives and works in Berlin) attended both the Academy of Fine Arts in Munich and the Düsseldorf Art Academy from 1987 to 1992 before receiving a master’s degree in fine arts from Goldsmiths’ College in London in 1994. Thomas Demand has shown his work at major museums and galleries worldwide. His solo projects include exhibitions at The Museum of Fine Arts, Houston (2024); Galerie nationale du Jeu de Paume (2023); UCCA Center for Contemporary Art (2022); Centro Botin, Santander (2021); Garage, Moscow (2021); M Museum, Leuven (2020); Fondazione Prada, Venice (2017, 2007); Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth (2016); Los Angeles County Museum of Art (2014, 2015); DHC Art Center, Montréal (2013); National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne (2012); the Museum of Modern Art, Tokyo (2012); Kaldor Public Arts Project #25, Sydney (2012); Boijmans van Beuningen, Rotterdam (2010); Neue Nationalgalerie, Berlin (2009); Museum Moderner Kunst Stiftung Ludwig Wien, Vienna (2009); the Serpentine Gallery, London (2006); the Museum of Modern Art, New York (2005); the Kunsthaus Bregenz (2004); and a survey at Fondation Cartier, Paris (2001). He also represented Germany at the 26th Sao Paulo Biennale (2004). His widely acclaimed exhibition “The Boat is Leaking. The Captain Lied.,” a collaboration with the filmmaker Alexander Kluge and the stage and costume designer Anna Viebrock, was on view at Fondazione Prada in Venice in 2017. His work has been included in four iterations of the Venice Architecture Biennale and was recently featured at the 2nd Chicago Architecture Biennale. His work is represented in numerous museum collections including the Museum of Modern Art, New York; Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York; Los Angeles County Museum of Art; Centre Pompidou, Paris; and Tate Modern, London. Thomas Demand has also curated several shows, including “L’Image Volée” at Fondazione Prada (Milan, 2016); “Model Studies” (Graham Foundation, Chicago, 2013); “La carte d’après nature” (Nouveau Musée National de Monaco, Monaco, (2010); and a contribution to the 13th Venice Architecture Biennale, “Common Ground” (2012)

TAPEI FINE ARTS MUSEUM — TFAM
No.181, Sec. 3, Zhongshan N. Rd., Zhongshan Dist., Taipei City 104227

04/05/24

UP Gallery, Hsinchu, Taiwan @ Photo London 2024 Discovery Section - Mia Liu Solo Exhibition

UP Gallery, Hsinchu, Taiwan  
Photo London 2024 - Discovery Section
Mia Liu Solo Exhibition 
Somerset House, London
16 - 19 May 2024

Mia Liu
MIA LIU
Aura Specimen Box, 2022
57x 49 x 17 cm
Bergger silver photographic paper 
on Aluminium Dibond, Japanese cypress box
Courtesy of the artist and UP Gallery

Mia Liu
MIA LIU
Aura Little silent fly, 2022
Bergger silver photographic paper 
on Aluminium Dibond
Courtesy of the artist and UP Gallery

Mia Liu
MIA LIU
Blue and White Tarp, 2022 
83 x 66 x 13 cm
ILFORD smooth gloss photographic paper 
on Aluminium Dibond
Courtesy of the artist and UP Gallery

UP Gallery presents at Photo London 2024 a solo exhibition of artworks by Wen-Hsuan (Mia) Liu. Continuing her exploration of "scapes," the artist MIA LIU unveil new works at Photo London 2024. Drawing inspiration from literature, particularly The Tales of Two Cities and Zhuang Zhou’s Butterfly Dream, she will delve into these new themes in her upcoming creations.

In her project, Mia Liu endeavors to harness the interplay of light and time. Delving into the historical roots of photography, Mia Liu is inspired by the cyanotypes of Anna Atkins and the photograms of Man Ray. Immersive walks at where she resides, Mia Liu meticulously collects botanical elements, using these excursions to document not only the external world but also the nuances of her own consciousness—because, for her, time shapes consciousness. Contrary to an interest in photography's conventional role of a comprehensive depiction on a single plane or serving documentary purposes, Mia Liu focuses on the ontology of light and time within the medium. She dissects the elements she gathers during her explorations, employing the darkroom to develop photographs that are later sliced and reconstructed to craft a seemingly thickened landscape. Through a repetitive process, this method becomes a psychological interpretation of "Scapes," encapsulating a specific moment in time within her consciousness. Mia Liu's conceptual exploration of photography extends to both the analog and digital realms. The former involves tangible encounters with the world, akin to the movements "drawn" by a flashlight and the incorporation of physical found objects. The latter, driven more by archival and documentary impulses, draws inspiration from cellular structures, textures, and surfaces. Through the creation of these photosculptures, Mia Liu breathes new meaning into the understanding of the photographic medium. 

Mia Liu
MIA LIU
Aura Light & Drawing
74 x 70 x 17 cm
Bergger silver photographic paper, 
ILFORD smooth gloss photographic paper 
on Aluminium Dibond
Courtesy of the artist and UP Gallery

Mia Liu
MIA LIU
Aura Drawing dialogue with Anna Atkins
121 x 90.5 x 13 cm
Bergger silver photographic paper, 
Bergger high definition inkjet paper 
on Aluminium Dibond
Courtesy of the artist and UP Gallery

MIA LIU is a visual artist who lives and creates in Taipei. She probes into art practices via an open, liberal status like drawing. Through the traverse and collision of various psychological and physical experiences in life with the things in contact in the moment, she catalyzes a series of creations in search for “dialogues,” producing poetic scenes where everything is connected. Hence, while it is as if she produces visual art in diverse forms, ranging from spatial installation to paper sculpture, drawing, photography, video installation, botanical sculpture, etc., Mia Liu roams in the midst of and connects them as one.


絕版影像館 UP GALLERY
No.47-1, Ln. 53, Dongnan St., East Dist., Hsinchu, Taïwan

PHOTO LONDON 2024

04/11/20

Chin Sung, Liao Chi-chun, Shiy De-jinn, Lan ChungHsuan, Lee LiChung, Kao JunHonn, Wu Chi-Yu @ Each Modern, Taipei - Love Songs

Love Songs : Chin Sung, Liao Chi-chun, Shiy De-jinn, Lan ChungHsuan, Lee LiChung, Kao JunHonn, Wu Chi-Yu
Each Modern, Taipei
Through November 28, 2020


SHIY DE-JINN
Abstraction (No. R1-27), 1964
Oil on canvas, 73 x 97 cm
© Estate of Shiy De-jinn, courtesy of Each Modern, Tapei


WU CHI-YU
Asia Air, 2018
Three-channel video installation, 12 m 32 s
© Wu Chi-Yu, courtesy of Each Modern, Taipei

Each Modern presents “Love Songs”, a group show comprised of works by seminal Taiwanese post-war artists SHIY De-jinn, LIAO Chi-chun, CHIN Sung and contemporary artists KAO JunHonn, WU Chi-Yu, LEE LiChung, and LAN ChungHsuan.

Initially, this exhibition was focused on of artists’ responses, their personal narratives, and the shifting meaning of art during a time of pandemic. But as a result of the intense seismic fluctuations in international relations due to these circumstances, the exhibition adopted a more macroscopic view of these relationships, and expanded our scope to reconsider time, region, and topic. As a result, the exhibition endeavors to contemplate the complex tension that exists between artist and country, as well as between countries, from a historical and contemporary context. The exhibition explores how these tensions influenced the views and practice of these post-war and contemporary Taiwanese artists.

The exhibition title, “Love Songs,” is not an explicit reference to songs that take romantic themes as their subject, rather, the show uses the trope of the love song as a metaphor for the turbulent, idealized, and at times seemingly aleatory connections between countries. They sing their affection, they break-up, they reunite.

From colonial periods, the post-war period, the Cold War, through failed diplomatic relations, missile crises, to the near future, “Love Songs” present artists from Taiwan responding to these macro-narratives impacting their lives and practices. Beginning on the second floor, the works of Shiy De-jinn, Liao Chi-chun, and Chin Sung illuminate their histories and their art from a time when the Western world attempted to exert a particular cultural influence on Taiwan’s development.

In 1924, LIAO CHI-CHUN (born in Taichung, 1902 - 1976) attended the Tokyo University of the Arts. He was lauded as one of the first Taiwanese artists to be shown in the Empire Art Show. In May 1962, Liao was invited by the United States Department of State to tour the museums and art institutions in the US and Europe to absorb the prevailing arts of that time. During his stay in Chicago, he began experimenting with a new method of art making. As one of the first Taiwanese artists of his generation to be sponsored to visit the US, he frequently shared his experiences with The Fifth-Moon Group, United States Information Agency, Lion Art and the other active art organizations. “Like Chagall said, he went to Paris to be inspired instead of learning how to paint. That’s why I strived to find my own new way.” Liao was not only a pioneer in developing the possibilities of Taiwanese modernism, he also imparted his knowledge to other artists, encouraging them to develop their own methods under the wave of abstract art. Liao’s “Portrait of Sun Yat-sen” (1945) was painted for the Tainan First Senior High School while he taught there. Although the painting was made before his visit to US, it strongly reflects Liao’s artist-identity during a historical turning point for Taiwan- the retreat of Japanese Empire and the retrocession of the ROC.


SHIY DE-JINN
Abstraction (No. Q5-31), 1964
Oil on canvas, 97.4 x 65.2 cm
© Estate of Shiy De-jinn, courtesy of Each Modern, Tapei

SHIY DE-JINN (born in SiChuan, 1923 – 1981) studied with the pioneering Chinese painter Lin FengMian. Shiy moved to Taiwan in 1948 and had his first solo show with the China Institute in America in 1957. That same year Shiy participated in the São Paulo Art Biennial, and would participate again in 1959. In 1960 and 1961, Shiy showed in group shows at United States Information Agency in Taipei, and was also invited by United States Department of State to visit the US in 1962 to research and encounter American art of that time. In 1963, he moved to Paris, France, and traveled throughout Europe. During that time, he became acquainted with Zao WouKi and Sanyu. Shiy moved back to Taiwan in 1966. In 1967, he created his only wall mural for the United States Information Agency in Taichung, and participated in the Sao Paulo Art Biennial once again. In 1972, he was in a group show held by Citibank. Shiy’s life and practice was tightly connected to the US. In the book “Shiy Dejinn’s Letters” he writes, “There is a famous American artist who paints the American flag realistically. To them, art is life, and the audience should experience  art in life. When we pursue art, I think there is aprinciple to seize, to make our art infinite – our emotions. Of course, the present context is important, as well as nationality, culture, and tradition. That’s how we keep from getting lost.” In his most famous portraitures, watercolors, and traditional Chinese architectural works, composed of lines and swathes of fauvist colors, the artist’s emotional state is always legible. In his “Abstraction (No: Q5-31)” and ”Abstraction (No: R1-27)” (both 1964) painted in Paris, Shiy portrays pastoral houses, done in both a near-pop art and abstract style.

CHIN SUNG (born in Anhui, 1932 - 2007) moved to Taiwan in 1949 with the retreating Kuomintang government. He first studied at the National Taipei University of Education, and joined the Ton Fan Group, Taiwan’s first avant-garde art group, in 1959. Through the 1960s, Chin’s art practice was heavily influenced by trends in Western art. During this time, he developed his unique style of black patterns and hard-edged lines. In 1960, Chin Sung was granted the Honor Award of São Paulo Art Biennial. Tragically, that same year he was accused by the government of producing anti-Chiang Kaishek paintings – a high offense during that period of martial law - which would lead Chin to eventually flee Taiwan. In 1965, Chin Sung returned to Brazil to serve on the jury for the São Paulo Art Biennial. In 1969, he moved to New York after a touring show in the US. Chin would remain in New York as politically he felt he was ostracized in Taiwan due to past accusations directed at his paintings. In the US he befriended Taiwanese emigrant artists Xie Lifa, Zhao ChunXiang, Hilo Chen, and Xia Yang. In his works, we might see a turn towards liberation. Although Chin Sung’s art varied throughout his life, his dream and pursuit of freedom as an artist never changed, but for Chin, this could only be achieved abroad.

The environment Liao Chi-chun, Shiy De-jinn, and Chin Sung lived in forced them to confront certain political realities of their time. Though their works do not take these circumstances as their main subject, they nonetheless exerted a great influence in their development. After various encounters with American and European modern art and culture, each in their own way integrated, rejected, and sublimated their own practice to create new horizons of Taiwanese arts. Thus, they are three of the most important artists to shape a globalized Taiwanese modern art.

While these post-war artists sought new ways to integrate art and life to a new modernity, a younger generation of contemporary artists now pull themselves away from the questions of style and technique towards the conceptual and the material. On the first floor of the gallery, they offer a new narrative in regards to the history and future of Taiwan, and its international “relationships”. Some from this emerging generation have studied or exhibited abroad. And although presently they all function within a stable context, through historical fragments, present-day anxieties, and looming futures, they seek to uncover the truth of the “love songs” between Taiwan, Asia, and its international partners.

KAO JUN-HONN (born in Taipei, 1973) presents a new field-research work made specifically for “Love Songs”. The work is an expansion of his previous series “Ncaq“ (2017). Kao’s documenting sketches, maps, video, performance, and ready-made installation represent the historical trace where the land and the aboriginal peoples of early modern Taiwan encountered colonial forces and foreign powers. 


LEE LICHUNG
Pigeon, 2020
Paint on paper, 21 x 29.7 cm
© Lee LiChung, courtesy of Eeach Modern, Taipei


LEE LICHUNG
War Pigeon, 2020
Video, 7 m 48 s
© Lee LiChung, courtesy of Eeach Modern, Taipei

“Military Pigeon” (2020) series by LEE LICHUNG (born in Tainan, 1980) explores a hidden international conflict which occurred in Feiyan New Village in Tainan through declassified US military files. During World War II, Taiwan was an integral seat for the Japanese Empire’s southern facing military operations.During this period, the US military utilized homing pigeons to conduct reconnaissance on the Japanese. Through a reenactment by the artist, we view Taiwan as a passive actor between two countries which greatly influenced its modern history of Taiwan through the perspective of a pigeon.


WU CHI-YU
Asia Air, 2018
Three-channel video installation, 12 m 32 s
© Wu Chi-Yu, courtesy of Each Modern, Taipei

WU CHI-YU (born in Taipei, 1986) ’s video installation “Asia Air” (2018) imitates the splitscreen view of virtual reality goggles. From a flight cabin to international travel, the division of airspace and the use of a drone, the territory of the sky is in constant flux due to the divisions of geopolitical circumstance. Though it should be borderless, it is now full of invisible fences and demarcations. Wu introduces a possible future of the sky to viewers through his collective images and historical documents. 


LAN CHUNGHSUAN
Let's bomb each other 1, 2020
Acrylic on canvas, 45.5 x 37.8 cm
© Lan ChungHsuan, courtesy of Each Modern, Tapei


LAN CHUNGHSUAN
Look Up, 2020
Archival inkjet print, 43 x 60 cm
© Lan ChungHsuan, courtesy of Each Modern, Taipei

LAN CHUNGHSUAN (born in Taipei, 1991)’s painting installation “Let’s bomb each other” (2020) leads the audience from post-war, cold war, to pre-war. The paintings of the missile trails turn the threats historical and memorial, yet the “puzzled” US military drone represents an unrecognizable appearance of the future. Alongside these two is a photograph of the blue sky resonates the universality of human beings.

“Love Songs” presents the attitudes and art practices of two different generations of artists working in the changing Taiwanese context of modern history. Together they attempt to hear the love songs within this dynamic. The songs connect not only the artist, their art practice, and their international perspectives, but also Taiwan to its “lovers.” These songs, sweet or heartbreaking, leave us wanting for love songs to come.

EACH MODERN  亞 紀 畫 廊
N° 156 Section 4, Xinyi Road, Daan District, Taipei, Taiwan

25/05/14

Taipei Biennial 2014: Nicolas Bourriaud selected as curator

The Taipei Biennial 2014 will be held at Taipei Fine Arts Museum from 13th September 2014 through 4th January 2015.

The French art critic/curator Nicolas Bourriaud (born 1965) has been selected as the curator of the Taipei Biennial 2014. Titled “The Great Acceleration”, it will develop his curatorial concept for the biennial around the topic Art and Its New Ecosystem: A Global Set of Relations.

Nicolas Bourriaud is the Director of the Ecole des Beaux-Arts, Paris (ENSBA) since 2012. Bourriaud is best known amongst his peers for his book Relational Aesthetics (1998) in which he attempted to reveal the new approaches to contemporary art in the 1990s by addressing an aesthetic of the inter-human, of encounters and of transforming social contexts.

In the Taipei Biennial 2014, curator Nicolas Bourriaud will expand on his theory of relational aesthetics, examining how contemporary art expresses this new contract among human beings, animals, plants, machines, products and objects. The exhibition will highlight the way artists focus on links, chainings, connections and mutations, and how they envision planet earth as a huge network, where new states of matter and new forms of relations appear, forming a new state of the “ghost dance” between people and objects that Karl Marx has described in the 19th century.

Today, the sphere of inter-human relations cannot be conceived apart from the factors of environment and technology. Similarly, how could art develop independently from them? This is why, since the beginning of the 21st century, contemporary artists have tended to explore the ties binding living beings with objects, the machine with the body, and the technological with the social – and to experience their interdependence – in order to renegotiate their relationships with both the technosphere and the biosphere.

In the West, some philosophers are critically re-evaluating the concept of such a new ecosystem, and are drawing from Chinese philosophy as a basic conceptual contrast to Western philosophy. For example, in the cosmology of Zhuangzi, time and space are infinite, without beginning or end. The free transitioning among object and object, object and person, without boundary or condition, he called the “Transformation of Things.” Graham Harman, meanwhile, considers everything as an “object”, whether physical, fictional, living or inert. In fact, this radical Western philosophical view of universal objectification distantly echoes Chinese thought.

Through such cultural and technological cross-pollenization, a possible global refoundation of aesthetics is taking shape at the present time. From this perspective, through the discipline and practice of contemporary art, the Taipei Biennial 2014 will attempt to examine art and its new ecosystem in a global set of relations.

Since 1998, the Taipei Biennial has launched its international programming in the city by inviting guest curators to contribute to an enriched environment, cross-cultural practices, and to showcase disciplines and new practices of art today. But the Taipei Biennial also endeavours to address social and historical issues concerning the city (Taipei) as a place, not merely a venue, by mixing artists and elements of the city.

In light of this, the Taipei Biennial 2014 has invited Nicolas Bourriaud as curator to organize the exhibition as a direct network of both the local community and the international community brought together by a common interest in addressing aesthetic issues in a new era.

In his recently publicized speech on the topic of “Art and Its New Ecosystem: A Global Set of Relations” on the 29th of December 2013 at the Taipei Fine Arts Museum, Bourriaud said, “Art theory and aesthetic concepts start from discussions with the artists and a dialogue with their work.” Bourriaud made a truly remarkable statement in conceptualizing the Taipei Biennial 2014. We can see that when curating an exhibition, Bourriaud shapes both ideas and artworks through open dialogue with the artists. 

Taipei Fine Arts Museum
No. 181 Zhongshan N. Road Sec. 3, Taipei 10461, Taiwan

07/11/04

Contemporary Art of East Asia at San Diego Museum of Art + Other venues - Past in Reverse: Contemporary Art of East Asia

Past in Reverse: Contemporary Art of East Asia
San Diego Museum of Art
November 6, 2004 - March 6, 2005

The San Diego Museum of Art (SDMA) presents a major group exhibition featuring many important established and up-and-coming artists from China, Japan, South Korea, Taiwan, and Hong Kong. Titled Past in Reverse: Contemporary Art of East Asia, this internationally touring exhibition organized by SDMA provides American museum goers a rare, yet extensive look at work from several vital artistic communities from Asia that are quickly gaining a foothold on the world cultural stage.

The exhibition is curated by SDMA's curator of contemporary art, Betti-Sue Hertz, and includes 21 artists and artist groups who have created innovative works representing some of the newest trends in an increasingly globalized art world. Among the featured artists are Soun-gui Kim, Cai Guo-Qiang, Wang Qingsong, Tadasu Takamine, Hiroshi Fuji, Michael Lin, and Leung Mee Ping. Major funding for the exhibition is provided by an Emily Hall Tremaine Exhibition Award.

This multifaceted exhibition showcases cutting-edge artists working in a diversity of media—painting, sculpture, photography, video, installation, digital media—who use contemporary approaches that reflect their respective cultural and artistic backgrounds. Occupying several of the Museum's galleries, each artist's work is featured in a separate section while accompanying wall texts—in both English and Spanish—articulate how the artist is responding to historical precedents. By including recent, new, and commissioned works, the exhibition also serves as an introduction to the latest trends in contemporary East Asian art.

The artists and artist groups included in the exhibition, listed here by country or region of origin, are:

Contemporary Artists from China

- Cai Guo-Qiang (b. 1957, born in Quanzhou, lives in New York), drawing/public events
- Cao Fei (b. 1978, born and lives in Guangzhou), photography
- Shao Yinong and Muchen (b. 1961 and 1970, born in Xining and Lianong, both live in Beijing), photography
- Wang Jianwei (b. 1958, born in Sichuan Province, lives in Beijing), video
- Wang Qingsong (b. 1966, born in Hubei Province, lives in Beijing), video
- Yang Fudong (b. 1971, born in Beijing, lives in Shanghai), video
- Yangjiang Calligraphy Group with Zheng Guogu, Sha Yeya, Chen Zaiyan, and Sun Qinglin (live in Yangjiang), mixed-media installation

Contemporary Artists from Hong Kong

- Leung Mee Ping (b. 1961, born and lives in Hong Kong), video installation/performance
- Wilson Shieh (b. 1970, born and lives in Hong Kong), drawing

Contemporary Artists from Japan

- Ryoko Aoki (b. 1973, born in Hyougo, lives in Kyoto), drawing installation
- Hiroshi Fuji (b. 1960, born in Kyoto, lives in Fukuoka Prefecture), mixed-media installation
- Mitsushima Takayuki (b. 1954, born and lives in Kyoto), installation
- Tadasu Takamine (b. 1968, born in Kagoshima, lives in Gifu), mixed media installation/performance
- Shizuka Yokomizo (b. 1966, born in Tokyo, lives in London), photography/video

Contemporary Artists from South Korea

- Flyingcity: Urbanism Research Group (based in Seoul), interventions/mixed-media installation/video
- Hee-Jeong Jang (b. 1970, born and lives in Seoul), painting
- Soun-gui Kim (b. 1946, born in Pou-yo, Chung-Nam, lives in Paris), video installation/photography
- Kim Young Jin (b. 1961, born in Busan, lives in Seoul), video installation

Contemporary Artists from Taiwan

- G8: Public Relations and Art Consultants Collaborative (based in Taipei), interventions/installation
- Hung Yi (b. 1970, born and lives in Taichung), painting/sculpture/mixed-media installation
- Michael Lin (b. 1964, born in Tokyo, lives in Paris and Taipei), architectural painting

Accessing the past to map the future, these artists explore aesthetic and conceptual principles that are rooted in the arts and culture of their particular region. Whether they work in traditional genres such as painting and sculpture or newer technologies such as photography, video, and digital media, they assert their connection to Chinese, Korean, or Japanese culture through a variety of avenues.

For example, some artists like Wilson Shieh and the Yangjiang Calligraphy Group use traditional materials and techniques while others, like Cai Guo-Qiang and Soun-gui Kim, engage established religious iconography and philosophical ideas. Others, like Hiroshi Fuji and Cao Fei, explore interactions with the everyday physical world to reclaim endemic ways of seeing and being.

Another approach employed by certain artists is to reveal new views on their cultural history and interdependencies within the region by drawing on, for instance, craft-based methods (Ryoko Aoki, Tadasu Takamine), landscape and floral imagery (Michael Lin, Wang Qingsong, Yang Fudong, Hee-Jeong Jang), family histories (Kim Young Jin), or indigenous concepts of time and space (Soun-gui Kim, Shizuka Yokomizo, Mitsushima Takayuki). Still others address modern political histories and their impact on the individual and the construction of social relations and space in urban centers (Flying City, Wang Jianwei, G8).

The selection of artists presented in Past in Reverse reveal that in spite of cultural proximity, there is as much disconnect as common ground among artists from any particular region, placing into doubt the possibility of a regional aesthetic. What is clear is that as Asia continues to participate more wholeheartedly in the international art scene, it is slowly becoming more confident that its cultural impact, while not as influential as its economic one, is steadily growing.

Past in Reverse: Contemporary Art of East Asia is made possible in part by an Emily Hall Tremaine Exhibition Award.

Exhibition Tour

- San Diego Museum of Art, Nov. 6, 2004-Mar. 6, 2005
- Kemper Museum of Contemporary Art, Kansas City, MO, June 3-Sept. 4, 2005
- Hood Museum of Art, Dartmouth College, Hanover, NH, Jan. 15-Mar. 12, 2006
- Hong Kong Museum of Art (pending)
(dates subject to change), 2006

Exhibition Catalogue

The exhibition is accompanied by a 176-page soft-cover catalogue featuring an introductory essay by the exhibition's curator Betti-Sue Hertz as well as four other scholarly essays by an international team of noted experts: Taehi Kang (South Korea), Li Xianting (China), Midori Matsui (Japan), and Zhang Zhaohui (China). Also included are extended entries devoted to each artist, a checklist of the exhibition, and biographies of the artists and essayists.

SAN DIEGO MUSEUM OF ART
1450 El Prado, Balboa Park, San Diego, CA