• Overview

    Dates

    05.08–08.03.2024

     

    Reception

    05.11.2024 (Sat.) 4:30 p.m.

     

    Venue

    TKG+ Projects 2F, No. 15, Ln. 548, Ruiguang Rd., Neihu Dist., Taipei 11492, Taiwan

     

    Artist

    Mit Jai Inn, Chou Yu-Cheng, Joyce Ho, Chiu Chen-Hung

     


     

    Wherever there are works of art, there almost always exists a unit of space. All the works linger in our mind as they occupy our gaze, forming a scale of the exhibition. Unintentionally, each stroll through the exhibition space conjures meaning. We feel rejuvenated by the connection between our body and the works through our movement. A Few Yards redefines the unit “yard” as a symbol within a space measured in square meters, mapping one fantastic yard after another across varying distances and mediums.

     

  • For more than 30 years, the work of Mit Jai Inn has always been characterized by abstract representation. From the...

    For more than 30 years, the work of Mit Jai Inn has always been characterized by abstract representation. From the intervention of performance in his early days, to the reshaping of everyday spaces, and the integration of Buddhist teachings and social practice, his scrupulous practice now shifts toward a vivid palette evocative of tropical climate, rendered within exuberant painting, sculpture, installation, and participatory work.

     

    What could be more fitting than a vow exchanged for a stone to create a gathering of people? Originally a participatory project, Marking Stones (2022) draws inspiration from bai sema, boundary stones of Thai Buddhist temples that define sacred spaces, and serve as measuring instruments before construction. The artist transforms bai sema into colorful papier-mâché baskets, lamps, and stools, delineating an imaginary realm within the exhibition space.

     

    Imbued with a sense of dispassionate observation, Chou Yu-Cheng’s practice amalgamates elements of pollution and household stains. Perhaps, these pieces of information can be reinterpreted through the language of art, where scouring pads and rags turn into painting tools, transmuting the concept of hygiene in Refresh, Sacrifice, New Hygiene, Home, Washing, Chou Yu-Cheng, Acrylic, Rag, Scouring Pad, Canvas, Image, Album #4 (2018).

     

    In Electroplating, Flowing, Soil, Fusion, Rice, Malformation, Toxins, Care, Regulations (2019), the artist integrates electroplated zinc plates commonly found in affordable housing, along with large-scale rice grain sculptures, a gradient painting, and an iOS blue file folder on the wall. Pivoting on the idea of environmental pollution, the work translates a series of terms into visual icons, and examines how opposing elements mutate into new imagery in the age of the Internet, while unfolding the complex relationship between language, visual art, and space.

    • 彌載映 Mit Jai Inn, TKKT2, 2023
      彌載映 Mit Jai Inn, TKKT2, 2023
    • 彌載映 Mit Jai Inn, Untitled, MSDD35, 2022
      彌載映 Mit Jai Inn, Untitled, MSDD35, 2022
    • 彌載映 Mit Jai Inn, Untitled, MSDD39, 2022
      彌載映 Mit Jai Inn, Untitled, MSDD39, 2022
    • 周育正 Chou Yu-Cheng, 電鍍金、流動、土壤、 融合、稻米、畸形生長、毒素、關懷、法規 Electroplating, Flowing, Soil, Fusion, Rice, Malformation, Toxins, Care, Regulations, 2019
      周育正 Chou Yu-Cheng, 電鍍金、流動、土壤、 融合、稻米、畸形生長、毒素、關懷、法規 Electroplating, Flowing, Soil, Fusion, Rice, Malformation, Toxins, Care, Regulations, 2019
    • 周育正 Chou Yu-Cheng, 智慧之光與壁毯之紅 Wisdom Light & Tapestry Red, 2023
      周育正 Chou Yu-Cheng, 智慧之光與壁毯之紅 Wisdom Light & Tapestry Red, 2023
  • A continuation of her interest in calibration and counting, Joyce Ho’s Momentum (2023) is a roll casting of multiple pairs of denim trousers, instantiating the act of standing up and sitting down, each moment frozen in time. The semi-arc resembles a quarter of an hour, where time is reimagined through mundane physical movements. Spanning thousands of years of chronometry and casting technology, the work encapsulates the memory of the body. Exploring the nuanced perceptual boundaries, the artist delves into the fleeting, trivial aspects of the everyday.

     

    As time inches forward, window views and ruins are rendered in exquisite silhouettes through Chiu Chen-Hung’s craftmanship. His recent body of sculptural work limns the obscure corners of the world, foregrounding what is abandoned, transient, out-of-the-way through materiality and volume. Inspired by the hydraulic engineering technique of daylighting, where the gentle flow of a river hidden beneath the city is revealed by removing the concrete and asphalt above, the “Daylighting” series (2021–2024) captures flora against light and shadow in intaglio on concrete, putty, and minerals. Together five distinctive landscapes on view form a vista of serenity.

    • 何采柔 Joyce Ho, Momentum, 2023
      何采柔 Joyce Ho, Momentum, 2023
    • 邱承宏 Chiu Chen Hung, 採光 No. 23 Daylighting No. 23, 2021
      邱承宏 Chiu Chen Hung, 採光 No. 23 Daylighting No. 23, 2021
    • 邱承宏 Chiu Chen Hung, 採光 No. 45 Daylighting No. 45, 2023
      邱承宏 Chiu Chen Hung, 採光 No. 45 Daylighting No. 45, 2023
    • 邱承宏 Chiu Chen Hung, 採光 No. 49 , 2023
      邱承宏 Chiu Chen Hung, 採光 No. 49 , 2023
  • Comprising a diverse array of works rendered in minerals, wood, cement, metal, papier-mâché, acrylic paint, fiber-reinforced plastic, and electroplated zinc plates, A Few Yards dwells in a courtyard of imagination where the body and the works on view become engaged in an open-ended dialogue, while footsteps echo between walls, space ultimately warped through experience.

  • Mit Jai Inn, Born in 1960 in Chiang Mai, Thailand. Lives and works in Chiang Mai, Thailand

    Mit Jai Inn

    Born in 1960 in Chiang Mai, Thailand. Lives and works in Chiang Mai, Thailand

    Mit Jai Inn studied art at the Silpakorn University from 1983 to 1986, and at the University of Applied Arts Vienna from 1988 to 1992. Upon his return to Thailand in 1992, Mit cofounded Chiang Mai Social Installation with a group of artists, scholars, and social activists.

     

    Defying conventional boundaries of painting, Mit Jai Inn enacts multiple histories and treatments of the medium through a physically rigorous and repetitive labor cycle of mixing, applying, overlaying, and eroding pigment. His paintings come into being at his outdoor Chiang Mai studio, where he gives turns to the vibrating spectrum of sun and moonlight, with nocturnal interludes under white fluorescent. His colorful, densely layered work takes a on a wide range of topographical variations and moods, ranging from somber amorphous blotches, to pastel crafted stripes to neon all-over dots, and more.

     

    Mit’s largely solitary studio practice is rooted in perception, with relational intentions. Emerging in Berlin and Vienna in the late 1980s, Mit began a vocabulary of serial forms intended to counter aspects of formal painting and its market and exhibitionary frameworks of their time. Mit’s paintings were unstretched and unframed, mostly two-sided, touchable works that populated public spaces and galleries alike. Embedded in Mit’s painted forms are reactions to aesthetic, social, and political histories. These include divisions between so-called Western and Eastern canonical painting, the sacred-secular intimacy of color, the shifting political states of Thailand, and site-specific reflections dedicated to the nations, spaces, and public spheres his works inhabit.

     

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  • Chou Yu-Cheng, Born in 1976 in Taipei, Taiwan. Lives and works in Taipei, Taiwan

    Chou Yu-Cheng

    Born in 1976 in Taipei, Taiwan. Lives and works in Taipei, Taiwan

    Chou Yu-Cheng graduated from the École Nationale Supérieure des Beaux-Arts de Paris and the research program - La Seine. Working across a wide range of mediums from installation, publication, performance to painting, the artist investigates the interrelationship between society and aesthetics through a minimalist yet thoughtfully choreographed skill set of knowledge and aesthetics that allows him to reveal the peculiarities of art, object, and space.

     

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  • Joyce Ho, Born in 1983 in Taipei, Taiwan. Lives and works in Taipei

    Joyce Ho

    Born in 1983 in Taipei, Taiwan. Lives and works in Taipei

    Joyce Ho received her M.A. in studio arts from the University of Iowa. She is an interdisciplinary artist with an emphasis on painting, installation, and performance. With an illusion rich in light and shadow, the artist aims to integrate the deconstructed movements and fragmented slices of daily routines to convey an intimate, yet alienated tension between people and reality. The artist’s work simultaneously captivates and confronts viewers, rendering the quotidian action depicted in her work as a momentary ritual.

     

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  • Chiu Chen-Hung, Born in 1983 in Hualien, Taiwan. Lives and works in Hualien, Taiwan

    Chiu Chen-Hung

    Born in 1983 in Hualien, Taiwan. Lives and works in Hualien, Taiwan

    Chiu Chen-Hung’s works are primarily presented in the framework of installation and sculpture. Like conducting an archeological expedition, he is especially proficient in excavating remnants from bygone times and uninhabited space. He reimagines forsaken objects and derelict structures by transforming them into abstract forms suffused with memory and sentiment that obey an intimate logic of nostalgia. 

     

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