This weekend, Huashan 1914 Creative Park plays hosts to a joint art exhibition “Voices 2025 x Photo ONE’25.”
The Taipei Times was invited on Wednesday to see the artists and exhibitors set up tables, art installations, hang picture frames and prepare for what organizers hope will be a popular event.
Occupying two distinct halves yet coming together in a shared space, the event showcases a wonderful mix of art, from photography to sculptures and interdisciplinary displays.
Photo: Lery Hiciano, Taipei Times
Photo ONE’25, on the right side of the event space, in buildings E2 A, B and C, is a showcase of eight individual galleries and dozens of artists, as well as tables of publishers selling photography books, magazines and even match boxes.
The artists represent not just Taiwan, but South Korea, Hong Kong and Japan as well, all bringing their unique perspectives for photography.
Themes and subject matter include food, tattooed gangsters and experimental depictions of relationships.
Photo: Lery Hiciano, Taipei Times
Shen Chao-liang (沈昭良), who serves as the event’s convener and led the pre-release gallery tour, has some of his most famous photographs on display from his series on Tokyo’s former Tsukiji Fish Market (築地魚市場).
ARTHIS Fine Art gallery displays a collection of black and white photographs from two Taiwanese photographers, Chih Huei-chang (張志輝) and the late Chang Chao-tang (張照堂).
Chih’s work leans toward landscapes, albeit moody, almost discomforting depictions of the natural world, while Chang’s photographs are surreal and open to the viewer’s interpretation.
Photo: Lery Hiciano, Taipei Times
One eye-catching exhibition is miniatures of stores, in all shapes and sizes, by Takahiko Suzuki.
Each store is represented as a recreation, an amalgamation of hundreds of digital images stitched together, alongside a large white poster of itself with the coordinates written across the sky.
A Web site then provides direction to the store from the viewers’ location.
Photo: Lery Hiciano, Taipei Times
Some of the stores are tiny stalls, others resemble churches, but the stereoscopic recreation perfectly straddles the line between authentic representations and works of art.
Each store is purposefully placed against a blue sky, a blank background, allowing for the viewer to visualize exactly where they would come across the store, what the owner looks like, how the food smells.
Japan’s Haruhiko Kawaguchi, part of the Gallery Tosei exhibit, set up his collection of photographs in which people interact with each other while wrapped in plastic, in contact but unable to bridge gaps between one another.
“Any questions?” he asked rhetorically with a smirk.
A family stands wrapped in plastic, much like a package, in front of their home and garden, also wrapped in plastic, two women kiss but are unable to interact with their environment; two people sit in a children’s playground, almost alien in how incongruous they are in contrast to their surroundings. His photographs speak for themselves, highlighting the barriers, often artificial, that separate us from our loved ones and our environments.
Moving away from the photography galleries, Tomoya Tsukamoto’s “Journey of Encounters” are the next stop.
Each individual piece is an expressive, larger than life, airbrushed canvas.
“This exhibition is an experiment in visualizing intersecting moments,” Tsukamoto said in an Instagram post promoting the event.
The kaleidoscope imagery of each work is made through airbrushing flowers and their petals, leaving behind white silhouettes against colorful backdrops.
While each individual work is visually interesting on its own, when taken together they create an effect to provide depth and meaning to the space.
Moving closer and standing further away both evoke different sensations in the viewer, a layered ethereal dynamic that speaks to the artist’s sense of space and detail.
Another non-photography collection of art is by Liu Hsin-ying (劉昕穎), presented by Taipei’s AKI Gallery.
Liu’s art is abstract, meant to resemble not just abstract landscapes but also represent specific moments, as seen in the bright red stalks in Straight to the Sky (直達天際) or the textures within Stars Scattered in the Dark Night Forest (星星灑落在黑夜的森林).
In addition to the exhibits, the galleries and artists will hold speaking sessions, award ceremonies and book signings throughout Saturday and Sunday afternoon.
June 9 to June 15 A photo of two men riding trendy high-wheel Penny-Farthing bicycles past a Qing Dynasty gate aptly captures the essence of Taipei in 1897 — a newly colonized city on the cusp of great change. The Japanese began making significant modifications to the cityscape in 1899, tearing down Qing-era structures, widening boulevards and installing Western-style infrastructure and buildings. The photographer, Minosuke Imamura, only spent a year in Taiwan as a cartographer for the governor-general’s office, but he left behind a treasure trove of 130 images showing life at the onset of Japanese rule, spanning July 1897 to
One of the most important gripes that Taiwanese have about the Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) is that it has failed to deliver concretely on higher wages, housing prices and other bread-and-butter issues. The parallel complaint is that the DPP cares only about glamor issues, such as removing markers of Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT) colonialism by renaming them, or what the KMT codes as “de-Sinification.” Once again, as a critical election looms, the DPP is presenting evidence for that charge. The KMT was quick to jump on the recent proposal of the Ministry of the Interior (MOI) to rename roads that symbolize
On the evening of June 1, Control Yuan Secretary-General Lee Chun-yi (李俊俋) apologized and resigned in disgrace. His crime was instructing his driver to use a Control Yuan vehicle to transport his dog to a pet grooming salon. The Control Yuan is the government branch that investigates, audits and impeaches government officials for, among other things, misuse of government funds, so his misuse of a government vehicle was highly inappropriate. If this story were told to anyone living in the golden era of swaggering gangsters, flashy nouveau riche businessmen, and corrupt “black gold” politics of the 1980s and 1990s, they would have laughed.
In an interview posted online by United Daily News (UDN) on May 26, current Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT) Chairman Eric Chu (朱立倫) was asked about Taichung Mayor Lu Shiow-yen (盧秀燕) replacing him as party chair. Though not yet officially running, by the customs of Taiwan politics, Lu has been signalling she is both running for party chair and to be the party’s 2028 presidential candidate. She told an international media outlet that she was considering a run. She also gave a speech in Keelung on national priorities and foreign affairs. For details, see the May 23 edition of this column,