The Taiwan Pavilion at the 54th Venice Biennale features works by Hong-Kai Wang and Yu-Hsien Su that explore the social soundscape of Taiwan. For her project Music While We Work, Hong-Kai Wang invited retired workers of a sugar factory in her hometown to record sounds found in their former workplace and filmed them during the process. Yu-Hsien Su's Sounds of Nothing showcases the musical creations of marginalised members of society, such as scavengers, foreign boatmen, and the homeless, released by his newly-launched record label. Another component of the exhibition is the Sound Library/Bar organized by cultural critics Tieh-Chih Chang and Jeph Lo, and designed by architect Kuo-Chang Liu. It comprises an audiovisual installation and documentation outlining the evolution of Taiwan history by providing a narrative of the sound of social movements and of sound production since martial law was lifted in 1987.
Artists' statements and biographies are included. With information on opening performances by Fujui Wang, Chi-Wei Lin and DJ @llen. A Chinese language edition of this catalogue is available.
The Heard and the Unheard - Soundscape Taiwan
Onsite
English
perennial exhibition,  sound art,  video art,  multimedia art,  installation,  interactive art,  community art,  Taiwan,  group exhibition
2011
96
9789860280227
2
catalogue
The Heard and the Unheard—Documenting the Soundscape of Taiwanese Society - Amy CHENG, 鄭慧華
Muzak for Nations - Kevin MUHLEN
No Sex, No Drugs, But Closer to Rock 'n' Roll Than Anything Else - Yu-Hsien Su and the Outsider Sound Artist - YU Wei, 游崴
Sounds of the Times: Taiwanese Popular Music and Social Protest - CHANG Tiehchih, 張鐵志
The Taiwanese Sound Liberation Movement - LO Jeph, 羅悅全
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