

Museum of Contemporary Art, Taipei
Wednesday Wednesday
10AM - 6PM
Wednesday Wednesday
10AM - 6PM
EXHIBITIONS & EVENTS
2024 / 08 / 17 Sat.
2024 / 10 / 13 Sun.
10:00 - 18:00
Artist
Shu-Kai LIN
Curator
Tzu-Ying CHEN
Assistant Curator
Ying-Ting CHEN
Supervisor
Department of Cultural Affairs, Taipei City Government
Organizers
Taipei Culture Foundation
MoCA TAIPEI
Annual Sponsors
THERMOS
Contemporary Art Foundation
Hui-Neng Chi Arts and Culture Foundation
Royal Inn
Annual Sponsor for Appointed TV/Screen
SONY
Media Cooperation
Radio Taiwan International
Special Thanks
DH Neology
Amidst constantly shifting daily routines, people today go about life with diligence and also some trepidation, yet with a sense of hope for the future, relying on elements that make up our everyday lives, such as cities, beliefs, civilizations, communities, industries, and jobs... For the artist, making art is inseparable from life. The people and experiences he encounters impact his current creations and influence the development of future concepts.
Rather than a journey into the past, The Unfinished Future Realm provides a pathway to the present and the future, seeking to unveil the chaotic relationship between physical sensations and everyday life, with attempts made to interpret the three complex intertwined temporalities consisting of “the lingering past,” “the ongoing present,” and “the unpredictable future” and to imagine an urban civilization that is being constructed.
This exhibition combines the two developmental trajectories of “unfinished” and “future” to illustrate the ambiguous boundary between life and art-making through the artist’s past experiences with setting up exhibitions. The exhibition space, which appears to be in the process of being put together, highlights the artist’s creative process and the relationship between the artworks and the audience and offers a response on how we can find our place in this fast-changing world while reconsidering the value and the future of the city which we dwell in. Extending from his focus on the future of urban civilization, Shu-Kai Lin uses the remaining wooden molds from his family’s foundry business as creative elements and creates assemblages to imagine and offer glimpses into urban civilization. Through integrating archaeological objects and paintings, as well as his ongoing development of “balcony texts” in recent years, a way to decipher and explore the mysterious and symbolic interpretive messages that constitute a future archaeological site is provided, leading us into a future urban civilization constructed by the artist.
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Born in Tainan, Taiwan in 1983, Shu-Kai Lin graduated from the Department of Fine Arts, Taipei National University of the Arts, from which he also earned a master’s degree. He currently lives in Tainan.
Graphic art and spatial installation are the staple forms of Lin’s oeuvre. Tainan, the place in which Lin came of age, is an ancient capital bristling with temples, serpentine lanes, and religious totems. The artist internalized these visual elements and spatial experiences, dismantling and reassembling the constituents of his personal life and epiphanies, thereby excavating the symbols in a claborate style gradually formed fantastic building that embody the cities and islands in his imagination, which resulted in his sui generis art series The Balcony City Civilization. Apart from creating images with religious implications, the artist seeks to turn the wooden molds left in his father’s factory into models of futuristic city, so as to reveal the myriad metamorphoses of cities and islands.
He has been invited to international and domestic large-scale exhibitions at Kaohsiung Museum of Fine Arts, Taipei Fine Arts Museum, National Taiwan Museum of Fine Arts, Asian Culture Center (South Korea) and Hiroshima City Museum of Contemporary Art (Japan). He has also worked as an artist-in-residence and presented his works in Germany, the United States, the Netherlands, and Thailand.
Born in 1996 in Tainan, Taiwan, Tzu-Ying Chen is an arts freelancer, and she is also currently pursuing a master’s degree in Arts and Design at the National Taipei University of Education. Having worked close to three years in a commercial gallery, she has experience in art administration and has also interned at an artist-in-residence organization focusing on educational promotion, with additional practical experience acquired from working on-site at art fairs. With extensive experience in exhibition planning and implementation, Chen is also a prolific writer on arts and culture.
Her research interests include visual studies and studies on social participatory art. Her latest involvement includes working on Fifteen Years’ Traces #Global Store Project #Back To Chiayi – Takahiko Suzuki Solo Exhibition and writing for Carrying Capacity – It’s Not Just the Artist's 30th Anniversary: Shu-Kai Lin Solo Exhibition.
In the digital age, the formation of an urban civilization construes and symbolizes the intertwining state of time and space in the real world. The increasing physical feelings of cumbersomeness and silence in the face of the real world also insinuate contemporary people’s desire for physical and mental ease, giving rise to a whimsical illustrated spiritual treatise. Taking on the role of a guide, the artist reconsiders and contributes to the meaning of civilization and contemporary life in urbanization while offering imaginative thoughts and anticipation for civilization in the future.
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