
MOCA exhibition explores the five senses
Today, we take you to a museum exhibition exploring daily life and the five senses. It’s titled “No Language” and will be on at the Museum of Contemporary Art Taipei until May 4. The exhibition features works from 14 Taiwanese artists, including an art piece made of chewing gum. FTV reporter Stephany Yang takes us in for a look!
This work was created by Chen Sung-chih using chewing gum. By replacing the act of chewing with sculpting and stepping, he hopes to explore the material’s mutation over time and encourage viewers to reexamine the aesthetic of everyday objects.
Yian Chen
MoCA Taipei public relations specialist
It’s made of chewing gum. When you walk into the exhibition, you can see its texture and smell it. He wanted to take the physical feeling of sculpting and turn it into a feeling of stepping on something. We usually chew gum. He switched from chewing gum to stepping on the gum to complete this work.
This work, “On the Ground,” was inspired by artist Ho Yen-yen’s memories of the Sunflower Movement.
Yian Chen
MoCA Taipei public relations specialist
You can see three boards, including one made of asphalt, and one out of outdoor sports field. Another is a wooden floor for an indoor sports field. The artist came up with the idea for this work when he participated in the Sunflower Movement in 2014. While he sat on the ground for a long time, he did not touch the asphalt floor, so he took the texture of the ground people stepped on and transformed it into a wall surface, allowing visitors to touch or smell it.
Artist Liao Chung utilized old, abandoned home appliances and gave them new life by connecting them with a remote game controller. Press a button, and the appliances will move. The work hopes to bring to light consumer culture and environmental issues.
Yian Chen
MoCA Taipei public relations specialist
You can see that there are many home appliances at the exhibition site. You can get the remote control from the refrigerator. This time he made the home appliances into cars, so people can use the remote controls to operate the home appliances. He hopes to creatively utilize the discarded home appliances and give them a new life. The work also criticizes consumer culture or environmental issues.
The Museum of Contemporary Art Taipei is holding an exhibition titled “No Language.” The exhibition explores everyday objects, memories of daily life, and five senses from each artist’s perspective.
Yian Chen
MoCA Taipei public relations specialist
No Language is an exhibition that does not require the use of words to explain. Sometimes the things you feel may not be expressed in words, so for these works you need to understand it through touch, or smell.
The exhibition will be held at the Museum of Contemporary Art, Taipei until May 4.
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2025-02-25