2020 Kuandu Biennale Jun Yang The Artist, His Collaborators, Their Exhibition, and Three Venues
2020 Kuandu Biennale Jun Yang The Artist, His Collaborators, Their Exhibition, and Three Venues
2020.12.11~2021.02.21
09:00 - 17:00
Kuandu Museum of Fine Arts. TNUA
About the Exhibition
An exhibition in three venues

The Artist, his Collaborators, their Exhibition, and three Venues continues from a series of solo exhibitions by Jun Yang that began in Seoul in 2018. The Overview Perspective at the Art Sonje Center was on the one hand an overview, but on the other a retrospective and a reflection on what it means for an artist to take a backward glance. With The Artist, the Work, and the Exhibition at Kunsthaus Graz in 2019, reflection shifted from the individual to systemic- institutional issues. As well as reflecting on what it means to be an artist, and what is expected of an artist and his work, the exhibition itself became an important theme. Finally, Yang’s solo exhibition in Graz turned into a collective undertaking with a large number of participators: Erwin Bauer, Mike Kelley/Paul McCarthy, siren eun youn jung, Lee Kit, Oliver Klimpel, Michikazu Matsune, Yuuki Nishimura, Yuki Okumura, Koki Tanaka, Maja Vukoje and Bruce Yonemoto. The deconstruction of the solo exhibition became apparent when Yang invited his namesake from San Francisco to take part. This other Jun Yang is also an artist, but of Korean descent.

The exhibition The Artist, his Collaborators, their Exhibition, and three Venues continues in the collaborative spirit of the exhibition in Graz, extending its focus to three locations and their particular contexts. Localisation, architecture, history, institutional practices and politics do not only shape what happens in a place, but also have an enormous influence on the perception and meaning of what is exhibited. The Kuandu Museum of Fine Arts TNUA is associated with the university, the TKG+ gallery is an internationally operating commercial art gallery, and the MOCA Taipei is a public municipal museum. Each of the three has its own mission, its own reason for existing: on a university campus, in a new district or in the middle of the city. This involves different tasks and addressees. While the Kuandu Museum is mainly directed towards students and teachers, the main task of the TKG+ gallery is to bring contemporary art to the attention of buyers and collectors. Many school classes from the surrounding area come to the MOCA, and also tourists, partly because of the old building dating from the Japanese colonial era. These three institutions were willing to stage the “solo exhibition” featuring the artist Jun Yang. This is manifestly expressed in the artwork Jun Yang (Red Letters): here, the name of the artist appears in bold letters on or in front of each of the buildings, visible from afar. However, the spelling is different in each place: traditional Chinese at the Kuandu Museum, simplified Chinese at the MOCA and Latin letters at the TKG+ Projects. The connotations change along with the spelling – an artist born in the People’s Republic of China, a figure affiliated with the contemporary Taiwanese art scene, an internationally successful gallery artist.

The focus on the artist’s name follows on from The Monograph Project, a publication completed in 2018, when the exhibition series began. Various artists are featured in a total of six volumes: June Young, Yang Jun, Tun Yang, Jan Jung, Yi Chuan and Jun Yang. It is a monograph on the artist and his work, but at the same time – in a paradoxical reversal – it also challenges monographic conventions and biographical writing. Like the monograph, this retrospective is in itself the subject of artistic investigation, challenging the unique position of the artist on several levels: through the work itself, the participation of other artists and – this applies especially to Taipei – the decision to exhibit in three locations. The significance of the locations is already reflected in the title: it does not say at three venues, in three venues or in three institutions, but and three venues. The locations are a theme in themselves; they are part of the contents of the exhibition.

The Artist, his Collaborators, their Exhibition, and three Venues is therefore a solo and a group exhibition, a retrospective and even a biennale, because at the Kuandu Museum the exhibition runs within the framework of the biennale that takes place there every two years. It manifests itself differently in each of the three locations, working with the specific contexts and setting different priorities accordingly. Nevertheless, some artistic works appear at two of the venues, or at all three of them, establishing connections between them. Sometimes modified, sometimes fragmented or subject to a change in meaning due to the context.

* Introduction text in the exhibition magazine “TAHCTE&TV”
About the Exhibition
An exhibition in three venues

The Artist, his Collaborators, their Exhibition, and three Venues continues from a series of solo exhibitions by Jun Yang that began in Seoul in 2018. The Overview Perspective at the Art Sonje Center was on the one hand an overview, but on the other a retrospective and a reflection on what it means for an artist to take a backward glance. With The Artist, the Work, and the Exhibition at Kunsthaus Graz in 2019, reflection shifted from the individual to systemic- institutional issues. As well as reflecting on what it means to be an artist, and what is expected of an artist and his work, the exhibition itself became an important theme. Finally, Yang’s solo exhibition in Graz turned into a collective undertaking with a large number of participators: Erwin Bauer, Mike Kelley/Paul McCarthy, siren eun youn jung, Lee Kit, Oliver Klimpel, Michikazu Matsune, Yuuki Nishimura, Yuki Okumura, Koki Tanaka, Maja Vukoje and Bruce Yonemoto. The deconstruction of the solo exhibition became apparent when Yang invited his namesake from San Francisco to take part. This other Jun Yang is also an artist, but of Korean descent.

The exhibition The Artist, his Collaborators, their Exhibition, and three Venues continues in the collaborative spirit of the exhibition in Graz, extending its focus to three locations and their particular contexts. Localisation, architecture, history, institutional practices and politics do not only shape what happens in a place, but also have an enormous influence on the perception and meaning of what is exhibited. The Kuandu Museum of Fine Arts TNUA is associated with the university, the TKG+ gallery is an internationally operating commercial art gallery, and the MOCA Taipei is a public municipal museum. Each of the three has its own mission, its own reason for existing: on a university campus, in a new district or in the middle of the city. This involves different tasks and addressees. While the Kuandu Museum is mainly directed towards students and teachers, the main task of the TKG+ gallery is to bring contemporary art to the attention of buyers and collectors. Many school classes from the surrounding area come to the MOCA, and also tourists, partly because of the old building dating from the Japanese colonial era. These three institutions were willing to stage the “solo exhibition” featuring the artist Jun Yang. This is manifestly expressed in the artwork Jun Yang (Red Letters): here, the name of the artist appears in bold letters on or in front of each of the buildings, visible from afar. However, the spelling is different in each place: traditional Chinese at the Kuandu Museum, simplified Chinese at the MOCA and Latin letters at the TKG+ Projects. The connotations change along with the spelling – an artist born in the People’s Republic of China, a figure affiliated with the contemporary Taiwanese art scene, an internationally successful gallery artist.

The focus on the artist’s name follows on from The Monograph Project, a publication completed in 2018, when the exhibition series began. Various artists are featured in a total of six volumes: June Young, Yang Jun, Tun Yang, Jan Jung, Yi Chuan and Jun Yang. It is a monograph on the artist and his work, but at the same time – in a paradoxical reversal – it also challenges monographic conventions and biographical writing. Like the monograph, this retrospective is in itself the subject of artistic investigation, challenging the unique position of the artist on several levels: through the work itself, the participation of other artists and – this applies especially to Taipei – the decision to exhibit in three locations. The significance of the locations is already reflected in the title: it does not say at three venues, in three venues or in three institutions, but and three venues. The locations are a theme in themselves; they are part of the contents of the exhibition.

The Artist, his Collaborators, their Exhibition, and three Venues is therefore a solo and a group exhibition, a retrospective and even a biennale, because at the Kuandu Museum the exhibition runs within the framework of the biennale that takes place there every two years. It manifests itself differently in each of the three locations, working with the specific contexts and setting different priorities accordingly. Nevertheless, some artistic works appear at two of the venues, or at all three of them, establishing connections between them. Sometimes modified, sometimes fragmented or subject to a change in meaning due to the context.

* Introduction text in the exhibition magazine “TAHCTE&TV”
 Back
Share to
繁中 /  EN
繁中 / EN