
Today, we take you to an exhibition exploring natural disasters. A series of artworks are on display in Taipei, where visitors can reflect on how to navigate crises from mother nature. FTV reporter Stephany Yang takes us in for a look!
This work was created by Taiwanese artist Wang Yu-song, in collaboration with the Earthquake Sketching Group, inspired by the Hualien earthquake on April 3, 2024. In the aftermath of the quake, Hualien-based artists documented the dramatic transformation of the local landscape caused by natural disasters in recent years. They visited the hardest-hit areas to document the evolving landscape through on-site sketches.
Yian Chen
MoCA Taipei PR specialist
The Earthquake Sketching Group formed after the major earthquake on April 3rd last year. They were interested in the earthquake and how Hualien’s environment had changed. Through on-site sketching, they observed different landscapes shaped by the earthquake, such as Taroko Gorge and other areas transformed by seismic shifts.
Chang Chen-wei employs 3D scanning and modeling techniques to recreate a car damaged in the Russia-Ukraine war. Building on his practice of sourcing and printing images from the internet, he utilizes a collage technique to input the car’s shattered exterior onto the fabric.
Yian Chen
MoCA Taipei PR specialist
He crafted the piece as a digital collage on textured canvas, portraying a car wrecked by the Russia-Ukraine war. The image was based on a 3D model he discovered online, originally developed by a Kyiv University architecture graduate who documented the vehicle on the battlefield. Through this work, the artist encourages viewers to consider how war and catastrophe may be closer to our everyday lives than we imagine.
MOCA’s new exhibition invited seven artists from Japan, Switzerland and Taiwan to showcase works about natural disasters and its repair processes. Ranging from immersive installations to multimedia works, artists address the island’s history of earthquakes, typhoons and political instability. The exhibition creates a space that offers both refuge and reflection, and visitors are invited into an environment that feels safely removed from danger, yet close to the realities. The works on display invite visitors to reflect on how to navigate crises and the unknown.
Yian Chen
MoCA Taipei PR specialist
The exhibition presents scenes such as trees toppled by last year’s Typhoon Kong-rey, as well as landscapes altered by earthquakes and storms throughout Hualien. It invites viewers to reflect on how we respond to our environment when faced with these powerful natural threats and how to deal with these situations.
The “Safe Room” exhibition will be on show at the Museum of Contemporary Art Taipei till Sept. 7.
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#MOCA #saferoom #naturaldisasters #typhoon #typhoonakongrey #地震寫生團
帶大家參觀一個探討天災的展覽。台北當代藝術館的新展覽「安全室」邀請了來自日本、瑞士和台灣的七位藝術家,展出以自然災害為主題的作品,希望引導觀眾思考如何面對危機。
由台灣藝術家王煜松與地震寫生團合作的創作《沒有葉子的森林》,源自於2024年4月3日發生的花蓮地震。地震發生後,花蓮藝術家們記錄了近年來自然災害對當地景觀帶來的巨大變化。他們深入受災最嚴重的地區,透過實地速寫記錄當地景觀的變化。
[[台北當代藝術館媒體公關專員 陳奕安]]
"地震寫生團其實是在去年403大地震後,因為地震衝擊了花蓮,造成他們的一些環境上的改變。他們透過實地寫生的方式,去觀察這些像是太魯閣或是地震變動的地景。"
另外,藝術家張宸瑋以3D掃描建模的技術,以一輛在烏俄戰場上遭戰火波及的汽車為素材。延續過往取材網路影像再輸出的手法,藝術家透過拼貼的方式將汽車模型的外皮附著到布面上。
[[台北當代藝術館媒體公關專員 陳奕安]]
"他是用數位的影像布面的拼貼去創作,它呈現的是一個在俄烏戰爭中被戰火炸的汽車。這個汽車的影像是藝術家在網路上,找到在基輔大學建築系的畢業生在戰場現場中去3D建模的汽車,邀請大家思考,可能這些戰爭或是災害跟我們的關係其實滿近的。"
台北當代藝術館的新展覽「安全室」邀請了來自日本、瑞士和台灣的七位藝術家,展出以自然災害及其修復過程為主題的作品。從沉浸式裝置到多媒體作品,藝術家們探討了台灣的地震、颱風和政治動盪的歷史。展覽營造了一個既能提供庇護又能引發反思的空間,讓參觀者置身於一個遠離危險,卻又貼近現實的安全環境中。展出的作品引領參觀者思考如何應對危機和未知。
[[台北當代藝術館媒體公關專員 陳奕安]]
"展覽中可以看到像是去年康芮颱風中倒塌的樹木,或是地震,或是風災如何改變花蓮的地景,邀請大家一起思考說當我們面對這些威脅,當這些威脅我們如何去面對身處的環境。"
「安全屋」展覽將在台北當代藝術館展出至9月7日。
更多新聞內容,請鎖定:
民視台灣台(152頻道)週一至週五晚上9:30
民視新聞台(53頻道)週二至週六凌晨1:00
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