杜偉
Tu Wei
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Mental calisthenics exercise artists
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文 / 蘇珊

A show that looks like the IKEA store and a literally shocking exhibit are featured in Taipei this week

Strolling around the furniture store IKEA is a fascinating experience for conceptual artist Tu Wei (杜偉) who currently has a solo exhibition titled Do Not Forget the Person in the Shade at IT Park.

The title refers to a style of photography made popular in the 1930s in Taiwan where a family had their group photo taken and wrote similar words under each person's image. As a catalog image sparks one's imagination, so does the archival past of memory and here Tu Wei tries to connect the universal world with the personal one.

The exhibition which looks deceptively similar to an IKEA living room display in that the two floors of the gallery have a parquet floor, a white sofa, a red lounge chair, a coffee table and a home entertainment system that are stand-ins.

Even though you are looking at something that resembles a product, you are not looking at IKEA per se. You are looking at a conceptual artwork that mimics how a public consumer showroom becomes a private individual platform for fantasy.

Tu Wei says that art allows us to imagine: much like dreaming of a new lifestyle in a furniture store. To hone the point further, the viewer's image is projected in a slow dissolve on the huge flat screen TV.

Conceptual art is definitely not WYSIWYG (what you see is what you get). It is more like doing mental calisthenics as the artist's metaphors may not be so obviously apparent on the surface.

Another exhibition currently on view and which requires some thinking on the part of the viewer is Eric Lin Chi-wei's (林其蔚) An Exposition of Unbelievable Hard-core Noises: Karma in Pause Mode, at the Chi-Wen Gallery.

In the first room there are horizontal, faded framed scrolls that seem to contain some ancient writing, while in fact they are yellowed rolls of aged fax paper of musical notation.

Lin ran his sketches through the fax machine which read the images creating sound signals which he then recorded on tape and transferred again into the fax machine. Here Lin combined sound and image in a loop format.

On one wall, a long ribbon of hand-sewn characters becomes a prop for a group-chanting session, as the ribbon is passed from person to person while each one chants the character.

Additionally, there are some videos and taped recordings of some of Lin's avant-garde sound performances. In one, with a stocking pulled over his head, and donning a cardboard hand-painted tribal mask, Lin literally tries to shock the audience out of their seats.

The Chi-Wen Gallery will be one of the 40 participating international galleries at the Digital and Video Art Fair in New York on March 9 to March 12, that takes place in the Embassy Suites Hotel in lower Manhattan.

It is the first art fair in the world devoted to showing digital and video art. Due to its success last year, DiVa also exhibited in Brussels, Paris and Cologne.

TAIPEI TIMES SPECIAL CONTRIBUTOR

Thursday, Mar 09, 2006, Page 15
 
 
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