The 21st annual Art Taipei kicked off on Friday with an eclectic concoction of colors, cultures and characters. The four-day art fair extravaganza which is currently taking place at the Taipei World Trade Center (台北世界貿易中心展覽) certainly lived up to its promise of not just appealing to high-rolling buyers, but also to ensuring that the experience of gallery-viewing was a more relatable and enjoyable one for the general public. Artists mingled with art enthusiasts, a variety of languages were spoken and the atmosphere was, largely speaking, lively and devoid of pretentiousness.
There were the usual big names — for instance, Annie Leibovitz’s 1998 portraiture of Yo-yo Ma with a cello hiding his face — but young, up-and-coming artists from all over Asia really held their own ground at Art Taipei this year. Moreover, the collections on display were far from conservative — vibrant colors, flirty motifs and contemporary reinterpretations of historical issues were among the most prominent themes tying the fair together.
HISTORY LESSONS
Photo: Dana Ter
A sizeable portion of artists this year hailed from Southeast Asia. Australian-based Filipino artist Miguel Aquilizan — whose headgear made out of taxidermy animals attracted as much attention as his artwork did — was one of these young artists chosen to represent the region.
Despite his chaotic ensemble, Aquilizan was calm and collected as he explained to the Taipei Times the symbolism behind his carefully refashioned Japanese dolls dating back to World War II which he had collected from antique shops around the Philippines. He acknowledged the utter physical and cultural destruction which occurred in his country, but also expressed a need to move on by constantly reinventing new meaning out of past catastrophes.
“I gather objects, research into their past and then create new meaning out of them. When I found the dolls, they looked very melancholic, so I reworked them to make them appear more cheerful,” Aquilizan said.
Photo: Dana Ter
The result is a fusion of different cultures, which is an inevitable fixture of modern-day life due to historical processes like colonialism and migration. The vibrant colors, rattan weavings and thick feathers, all of which are sewn into the dolls, are distinctly Filipino while the kimonos are obviously Japanese. On a lighter note, the dolls’ impeccable fashion sense are a nod to Aquilizan’s interest in fashion design.
On the other side of the historical pendulum, artist Nobuaki Takekawa’s oil on canvas Cicada Eclosion and I, 1250 Years (2014), provides a critical view of Japanese history over the past centuries. The painting resembles a genealogical chart with generations of offspring sprouting from common ancestors. Earlier generations are cicadas and their descendants are farmers and horsemen, eventually evolving into modern people.
The cicada motif is important since cicadas are meant to symbolize reincarnation in Japanese culture. Nobuaki’s depiction of the Nazi German flag and the Rising Sun flag alongside recent protests against the Shinzo Abe government draws similarities between past and present, suggesting that history repeats itself.
Photo: Dana Ter
ANIMAL INSTINCT
Animal imagery was surprisingly abundant at this year’s fair. Malaysian artist Haffendi Anuar’s Liquid Serpents 4 (The Garden) (2014) was eye-popping in the sense that his vinyl-printed snakes seemed like they would jump out and bite you despite being encased in multiple layers of Plexiglas.
Anuar said that he had always been fascinated by cold-blooded invertebrates like slugs, squids and snakes because despite their seemingly repulsive nature, there’s a certain earthiness to them that he finds alluring.
Photo: Dana Ter
“As we modernize, we tend to stray away from nature,” Anuar said, “but nature finds a way to get back into your life. For instance, we wash our hands from soap made out of aloe vera and wear face masks made out of snail slime.”
Anuar added that snakes represent knowledge but are protective of it like in the Garden of Eden story. He was also drawn to the cyclical nature of their skin and how it symbolizes the humdrum repetitiveness in our own modern-day lives — something universally relatable. On the other hand, according to Anuar, the oil spills interwoven with the snakes’ bodies are representative of Malaysia’s dependency on its oil industry.
Meanwhile, Shenyang-born, Beijing-based Chinese artist Shi Mohan (史墨涵) taps into the theme of loss of innocence, but through human rather than animal subjects. The young artist is known for depicting her innermost thoughts and morbid fantasies. Subjects like a child’s cherubic face, which seems pretty at first glance, are sullied when viewers realize that the child is holding a bloodied skull or that its limbs are distorted or, in the case of Surgery (2014), that she is performing surgery on herself.
LIGHT-HEARTED BUT WITTY
Other pieces of artwork were more light-hearted but equally witty and imbued with criticisms and commentary on modern-day life.
Taiwanese artist Chang Li-ren’s (張立人) animated photo frame Classic Skin Flick Series 12 (2013) appears to be a pleasant portrayal of a 1930s Shanghai-style pin-up girl with a bob haircut which were used for cigarette ads during the time. However, the model in the photo frame starts moving and pealing off her clothes one by one until she is sitting completely nude.
Despite the viewers’ gasps and giggles, the process of undressing is not just a silly act, but could be representative of the shift in public perceptions in Taiwan and in other countries of sex being a taboo topic to being something that is more openly embraced and discussed.
Similarly, Nissem Ben Aderet’s depictions of human figures interlocked and stacked on top of each other, sometimes sharing the same limbs, are comical yet deeply reflective. Upon closer examination, the Israeli artist’s artwork, which is all done with a single stroke of a marker is evocative of the stress and fatigue arising from over-crowdedness in big cities.
One does not need to be an art critic or high-flying buyer to attend Art Taipei this year. A lot of the artwork draws upon universal themes and will naturally speak to any open-minded, culturally-aware young person familiar with life in a global city, circa 2014.
Art Taipei runs until tomorrow at the Taipei World Trade Center, Exhibition Hall 1 (台北世界貿易中心展覽大樓一館), 5, Xinyi Rd Sec 5, Taipei City (台北市信義路五段五號). The exhibition is open from 11am to 7pm today and 11am to 6pm tomorrow. Admission is NT$200 to NT$500. More information in English and Chinese can be found at art-taipei.com.
China has begun recruiting for a planetary defense force after risk assessments determined that an asteroid could conceivably hit Earth in 2032. Job ads posted online by China’s State Administration of Science, Technology and Industry for National Defence (SASTIND) this week, sought young loyal graduates focused on aerospace engineering, international cooperation and asteroid detection. The recruitment drive comes amid increasing focus on an asteroid with a low — but growing — likelihood of hitting earth in seven years. The 2024 YR4 asteroid is at the top of the European and US space agencies’ risk lists, and last week analysts increased their probability
Feb. 17 to Feb. 23 “Japanese city is bombed,” screamed the banner in bold capital letters spanning the front page of the US daily New Castle News on Feb. 24, 1938. This was big news across the globe, as Japan had not been bombarded since Western forces attacked Shimonoseki in 1864. “Numerous Japanese citizens were killed and injured today when eight Chinese planes bombed Taihoku, capital of Formosa, and other nearby cities in the first Chinese air raid anywhere in the Japanese empire,” the subhead clarified. The target was the Matsuyama Airfield (today’s Songshan Airport in Taipei), which
On a misty evening in August 1990, two men hiking on the moors surrounding Calvine, a pretty hamlet in Perth and Kinross, claimed to have seen a giant diamond-shaped aircraft flying above them. It apparently had no clear means of propulsion and left no smoke plume; it was silent and static, as if frozen in time. Terrified, they hit the ground and scrambled for cover behind a tree. Then a Harrier fighter jet roared into view, circling the diamond as if sizing it up for a scuffle. One of the men snapped a series of photographs just before the bizarre
For decades, Taiwan Railway trains were built and serviced at the Taipei Railway Workshop, originally built on a flat piece of land far from the city center. As the city grew up around it, however, space became limited, flooding became more commonplace and the noise and air pollution from the workshop started to affect more and more people. Between 2011 and 2013, the workshop was moved to Taoyuan and the Taipei location was retired. Work on preserving this cultural asset began immediately and we now have a unique opportunity to see the birth of a museum. The Preparatory Office of National