Wednesday, 15 April 2015

倫敦城裡遇見林士強










The images of our young energy emerged in my mind when I put the gramophone needle on the 7" vinyl featuring the Born Slippy by Underworld. I was looking at a sleeve that created by a Taiwanese artist Lin Shih Chiang in Somerset House London.



Secret 7" is a annual event combines art and music since 2012. This year they support Nordoff Robbins which is a charity dedicated to transforming lives of vulnerable children and adults through music therapy.


This event takes 7 tracks from 7 of the best-known musicians and press each one 100 times to 7" vinyl. Then invitees creatives artists around the world to illustrate for every 7". 700 sleeves are exhibiting now in Terrace Rooms at Somerset House till 3rd May 2015.

當我把唱針放在唱片上,耳朵裡傳來born slippy的鼓聲,熱血的回憶就蹦蹦蹦的出現在我的腦裡,而我當下正站在倫敦薩默賽特府的展廳裡與台灣藝術家林士強的入選作品相望。

Secret 7" 是一年一次的展覽,結合了藝術音樂與公益募款活動。今年選出7首經典單曲,各單曲壓製成100張7寸黑膠唱片,並邀請世界各地的藝術家以個人風格創作出單曲封面。這700張單曲會在5月4號以一張50英鎊售出。每張單曲只有一張,而且收藏的人不曉得會收到哪一首音樂,因為’秘密七寸‘是這個活動的精神。


今年的七首單曲分別為:
The Chemical Brothers - Let forever Be
Diana Ross and The Supremes - Reflections
The Maccabees - Go
Peter Gabriel - Sledgehammer
The Rolling Stones - Dead Flowers
St. Vincent - Digital Witness
Underworld - Born Slippy
你聽過那幾首呢?

策展人運用當代影像設計師與音樂結合,替公益團體募款,非常聰明且獨特的方法,也讓世界各地藝術家有不同的展出機會。走進展場,左右兩面牆各別展出700張不同的封面。第一跟第二個展示空間裡各有一個中島,放置了7台唱盤,每個唱盤有4對耳機給觀眾聽覺上的享受。第三個空間裡的裝置是一個巨大木箱,往木箱裡望去,發現一個銅拔吊在中央,銅拔的前方有一個軌道,頓時明白了剛剛走近展場時聽到的銅拔聲就是從這裡傳出來的。
它的目的是讓來參觀的民眾經由銅板敲響銅拔一起贊助這個公益活動,以下是我嘗試了一下‘為善欲為人知’的影片。





Friday, 3 April 2015

Bubble Land in Schmuck 2015

 



“Capturing and reconstructing impressions on the land of our time”
They changed ‘constructing’ to ‘reconstructing’ on the wall in the gallery. This is an interesting point for a group of artists who work together. After all passion, thinking, and collective hit together, the word ‘reconstructing’ has a better transmission for this exhibition.

Gallery Kobeia featured10 artists from Taiwan who communicated to the audiences with their observations of the land they live in. When I walked into the gallery, there was a pile of ziplock bags which appeared in the form of a bubble, both individually and collectively. Jewellery pieces were hung on the wall and the video player was playing music that attracted my ears immediately. It was a Taiwanese traditional instrument to be heard playing when religious parades are shuttling through villages or cities.
I was pleased to have a short talk with one of the artists, Yung-Huei Chao.

Moski (M): This is the second exhibition you host in Schmuck. Could you tell me why chose Bubble Land as a theme this year?

Yung-Huei (Y): We chose “Ni Hao” last year, because it’s like saying hello in the UK or kissing cheeks in France. It was the first time for us to exhibit in Munich. We would like to “say hello” to this contemporary jewellery carnival. This year we chose “Bubble” because it has multiple-faces. When heard this word, most people may consider it as a cute expression, and somehow, actually it contains sorrow facts in it. For example, it could brake easily, fragile, and response to one of the popular topics from last year, which was Schmuck exhibition, is a bubble only insiders talk about it. However, there is an interesting viewpoint, when many bubbles are gathering together, it takes shape into a configuration of this culture. It contains many status and countless possibilities. It also represents 10 thoughts linking together from artists who are islanders. Each artist is a single bubble when we dedicate ourselves in creation world, however we also have the needs to interactive with more bubbles. When many small bubbles link together it could be a huge bubble.
It is a connotation of how human beings live together but still independent just like the number of contemporary jewellery artist is growing.

M: Why chose ziplock bag as a material to form your installation?

Y: These bags are similar to the bubble. Not only in the shape but also in the characteristic. When they are stack, they interactive to each other. This material is easily accessed in Taiwan, so we take this advantage to make this installation.

M: Do you design the lay out in a specifically reason?

Y: Because 10 artists have very different and specific style, so we have designed independent areas for each artist, and hopefully the audiences could connect to every artist’s bubble world. After these days, we have some interesting responses from the visitors as well, and that is also stimulation for artists.

Next are glimpses of current collections from 10 artists for Munich Jewellery Week 2015.


Mei-FangChiang – Picking Leaves Series interprets the relationship between plants and environment as well as the mutual dependence of jewellery and wearer.



Yu-PingLin – The Journey of Kaleidos
This is an interactive work by the artist; by flipping over the flower, audiences could experience the changing pattern and kaleido-like visual effect.


Ying-Hsiu Chen – Scenery in My Mind is the new creation of the Sketch Series collection. The golden particles are mimicking various kinds of creatures under the sea. Ying-Hsiu uses this creation recording her life of living at the seaside. Some visitors believe the colourful childhood nurtures her work.


Heng Lee – Floral Print of Formosa
This series explain the conflict between technology and natural nowadays. Although we could search most of the plants on the Internet, however we cannot touch or feel them. We all live in the impact of new technology and it is like a magnificent weave came into our life before our notices.



Han-ChiehChuang – Brick Series
Red is Chuang’s representative colour, her experiments playing with red in different mediums, brick, enamel, paper… etc., which builds up the pieces of the memories relating to her homeland.


Artist was made aware the value of traditional culture is rare and precious. Therefore she deforms traditional Chinese calligraphy and porcelain for the sake of cognition.


Yung-Huei Chao – transient Space
Artist’s work is a reflection of an existence that supposed to be invisible. The illegal structure is one of Taiwanese memories (such as me), also a silent toleration. The new work could expand and contract featuring the ambiguous of this silent toleration.  


Wen-MiaoYeh – Buzz Buzz
New creation is derived from the memories of artist’s childhood. She continues the concept ‘space as a memory’ to create these repetitive bicycle images. To Miao, space is not just for living, but a standpoint of life accession.

The new collection is a conversation with artist herself. The talk is about internal, external, conflict, and self-discovery. The pure joyfulness of creating is a balance between pragmatism and idealization, moreover, it is a recording of artistic life in present days.

In relation to urban life, her work responses to human beings live together yet independently as well as ‘Two Make One Heart 1’ is cohered by several pieces of knitting acrylic. Artistic creating is an isolated status for Cai-Xuan. However the support from families and friends just like the connection of the bubbles weaving up the net of ‘group’.    


After Yung-Huei’s guidance, I had a peek at their catalogue. They printed it in two directions. These images were taken at different times in various locations. The purpose of this lay out is to encourage visitors linking the jewellery pieces with the images of their homeland. While I flipping back and forward this catalogue, the memory of home that lied hidden deeply in my heart was triggered by these art pieces and the photos.

Jewellery is one of the oldest archaeological artefacts. It is a unique language that we use in many occasions in our lifetime. It is not only a body adornment but also a way of learning about human cultures. The Oxford English Dictionary defines ‘contemporary’ as relating to now, and also as living, existing, or occurring together in time. Contemporary jewellery is the new jewellery of the time, it is what jewellery artists are making in the present day; it is what is happening now. 


In Munich every March, Schmuck attracts a group of people who devote themselves to the contemporary jewellery movement. This does not overturn the traditional value of the object itself, but expands the meaning of jewellery beyond body adornment. These new meanings not only focus on concepts deriving from the object and the wearer relationship; but also a reflection of new artist working in the present generation. These artists present what they do and how they live now, as another page in jewellery history. For me, as an international student and possible future curator, Schmuck illustrates a positive direction and the message that jewellery can be more than a status symbol. (To be continued...)

Courtesy of Bench 886 & Miss Moski