Monday, November 26, 2012

Dream in a Asian Contemporary Secret Garden


Dream in a Asian Contemporary Secret Garden

Luchia Meihua Lee

Treatment of gardens has evolved into a genre featuring many aspects of nature: flowers, trees, water, and fauna – all of which are messages to the dreamer. Gardens are realms of longing, both spiritually and physically, and one expects them to be pleasant, visually colorful, or playful.  These qualities and other more surprising ones are evinced in the work of these 24 Asian artists who challenge the mainstream culture discourse that relegates Asian contemporary art to a curiosity. Their collective oeuvre elucidates the diversity of experiences and culture that may be grouped together under the rubric of Asian contemporary art, Gardens change according to the season and as a result of human involvement. They are moving landscapes, and children’s wonderlands, where fairy tales start. More frequently grounded in literary contexts, Asian gardens provide meeting places for poets, scholars, and literati; and mystical legend love stories flower in the back garden.

I conceived of a framework for Dream in a Asian Contemporary Secret Garden consisting of the four areas of poetic garden, landscape in motion, wonderland, and hidden garden, and located 24 artists to distribute within these areas. Within these broad categories, these 24 idiosyncratic visions generate a kaleidoscopic array of works that take part in manifold artistic dialogues. Juxtaposed with an Oriental floral motif is a Wall Street money matrix; pop images look down on kinetic installation art; finely decorated kimonos share wall space with fantasmatic paintings; dayglow pink polluted flamingos line up to lure sirens and forest messengers. Some of the gardens conjured up are neither enjoyable nor welcoming, and contain secrets that can only be unveiled by an artistic journey. Such gardens might be overlooked or ignored by untutored eyes. The wide variety of different interpretations of and responses to garden is the theme here.

Gardens in Asia are typically more exotic and erotic than their Western counterparts, Of course, a secret garden in an imperial palace exhibits these characteristics in the extreme, and the intersection of private and public life lends itself easily to passion, drama, and tragedy.

A dream encapsulates a person’s spirit in a journey, a sequence of images, sounds, feelings, and experiences in a different time-space. A famous Kuanqu opera “Peony Pavilion”[1] is well-known for its story of garden dreams that lead to a stunning and tragic love story. Dreams do not take place in a worldly, functional situation; they float between sense and illusion. A dream might be a fragment or a continuous story. All might be clear after the dreamer’s awakening, or it might be difficult to recall and be found that be in conflict with the real world and consciousness. The purpose here is not to give a scientific treatment of dreams, but to appreciate the artistic expression of mind experiences.

A dream in a secret garden is a romantic or erotic scene. While the contemporary world is much more sophisticated than an idyllic garden, a metropolis may be considered as an urban garden. Since antiquity, the garden has been a common theme in both Eastern and Western art, and it remains so. The concept of garden originated with the natural scenes celebrated in ancient times[2], and expanded to imperial back gardens and those built by the nouveaux riche during the industrial revolution or periods in which trade was ascendant. During these latter eras, private gardens built by the rich afforded civilians the opportunity to enjoy their own flora, stones, ponds, bridges, or creeks. As might be expected, in Asia they were developed by merchants after the opening of international trade.  This garden-building trend continued to develop in the modern era, and now the city boasts its own gardens - on roof tops or in penthouses.


Poetic Garden

Poetic garden is the historical and literary discourse - for example, through poems - to express the vicissitudes of life or society. It is a rhetoric of the four seasons. A garden can be a heaven where poets express their imagination, splash their color and abstract forms through subtle line as in Kay Lin’s painting. The endlessly revolving landscapes of the four seasons are revealed in her poems that label the expression of her inner mind. Lin’s work in some sense combines abstract expression and impression, yet one senses that a Chinese landscape underlies it all. She plays with Monet’s water lily pond, Jackson Pollock’s splash and drip painting, and ink brush painting. Unlike others, however, she characteristically covers the result with a smooth oily surface that gives her paintings a different feel and a more contemporary expressionism. Lin’s paintings, for all their modern appearance, all contain Chinese elements.  For example, the Chinese titles seemingly carved on the paintings recall the art in DunHuang Grotto[3]. She writes “Reading a painting like a poem. I create a picture with a poem’s feeling. I paint a picture just like composing a poem. With only few words, it flows.”[4]


 Kotaro Fukui’s poetic expression in his statement reads “When complete peace comes,
How should I suffer? In our heart and in society, there exists light and darkness, They never leave our hearts.The Light and the Darkness exist within us
I want to give off light in the darkness, existing in the same place without change, linking the past, present, and future!..I paint, with these thoughts in my mind.” Fukui exemplifies Japanese character by using traditional organic materials such as minimal pigments, washi, bee glue, and Indian ink. Fukui lives and works in Tokyo, a very crowded and boxy city, and reveals one occupant of a city garden - the ostrich. It’s an African bird, but the image in profile looks like a traditional Japanese subject, the crane. The image and line of the ostrich are studies in contrast - in shape, and in black and white. For his “Silent flower,” which is the iris, Fukui use lapis lazuli which he applies to a background of gold leaf; he then hangs the painting on a dark wall. The vibrant blue contrasts perfectly with the warm shine of the gold leaf, creating a virtue and a blessing.

Fukui’s father and great grandfather were both artists, and the young man grew up in an environment supportive of artistic endeavor. He absorbed his great grandfather’s Nihonga[5] influence, and adopted his father’s advant garde spirit. Fukui’s ostrich motif not only shows up on paper, but also on kimonos and obis. He has expertly applied an ancient technique to obis – foil which has been oxidized for hundreds of years was cut and rewoven to produce incredibly beautiful obis. Likewise, his ostrich painting on washi kimonos is completely stunning. The atmosphere is another garden for poetry reading.

Sometimes a poem combined with painting and dance can further advance the search for the essence and encompassing definition of art.[6] Jessica Pihua Hsu’s paintings are always related to poems, whether they be romantic, emotional, or an expression of daily feeling toward nature. Irises and weeds are splashed by the wind in her work Dancing Iris; you can smell the flowers’ fragrance. Hsu’s Garden in Moon Light was inspired by  Cow's Skull: Red, White, and Blue, one of Georgia O'Keeffe's most famous works; there O’Keeffe pictured a bleached cow’s skull above a black stripe with blue and white on either side supported with stripes of bright crimson. In Garden in Moonlight, Hsu borrowed the bright red for the curtains to present the magical reflection of her secret garden.  The moon casts silver light on her garden, capturing not only the beauty of the roses but their fragrance as well.

A poetic painting does not necessarily come equipped with a foot note, if a delighted atmosphere show its affinity with the universe. Tung Hsinru favors a painting style that is formless and abstract. A few clear strokes show a dreamlike world on canvas, and yield strong images on a blurred background. Using this method, he draws constellations of comets that arc across and suddenly drop from the sky. He engages the viewer in reconsideration of the earth and the sky. The result is a striking work of stark contrasts that asks the viewer to reimagine the earth as an organic part of the universe. Tung simultaneously asks the audience to recalibrate itself against an astronomical measure, thus commenting on our petty daily concerns.

A traditional Chinese brush ink painting requires a literary poem with a seal. At first glance, Pan Hsin Hua’s work is reminiscent of ancient ink brush painting. The content of the paintings seems more narrative than merely representations of landscapes. For example, Pan’s images show children playing with pets in the garden. But the paper and colors have been treated to yield faded images that give the paintings the cast of a far-away memory. In the artist’s own words, “more important, there is a wide gap in her works that indirectly separates her creations from imitation of tradition in a familiar yet aloof, ironic and sarcastic manner. The works solely belong to the time in which they exist.”

An album or fan mimic a typical ancient literary book, as in Chang Lishan’s artist book recording his in existence. Upon arriving in New York, Chang used this book to combine his artistic career with his daily work as owner of a moving company. From a trancultural perspective, he inhabited an in-between space straddling disparate cultures and societies. The effect of cultural dislocation compelled Chang to record his life when he came to New York. Ever volatile, while preparing for an art installation for the “Nexus” exhibition at the Queens Museum, he baked baguettes daily, and formed over a thousand baguettes into an installation that expressed the larger struggles of his life. Chang’s life itself is a type of art action and performance; he adds a further layer of meaning by commenting on it in his album, describing and existence halfway between the exigencies of practical life and a literati’s poetic outlook.

Landscape in Motion

We sometimes search for the eternal in the world surrounding us. While the eternal never exists in the impermanent human material word, the landscape in art is a human work that moves like an animation. We might find some images to be clearer, while others are a jumble of memories from several lives. Urban motion is never ending, while some flowers blossom only once. Therefore, people never have enough patience to understand each other deeply, or grasp the true facts.

A city is always on the move, as is the metropolitan garden shown to us in Landscape in Motion, Chin Chih Yang’s video installation which focuses his views of the city, of political issues, and of the current financial storm. Living and working in New York, Yang has a great subject to show his mind’s motion. In recent years, his work has combined action and performance that communicate with the audiences, since his work always points out the pressing issues of the society and environment in which we live. For example, in Pollution Solution he creates a disaster in our world that extinguishes the city. And in 2050 Dumbo, he attached dozens of plastic bottles and soda cans to his body. His is a type of poverty art that comments on a bitter and real life. The review in the Village Voice read: Chin Chih Yang’s inconvenient truth titled 2050 Dumbo, is a multimedia video projection that “drowns” the neighborhood in water to show the destruction that rising sea levels can bring.

The expressive power of moving objects can bring out the harmony of a series of related contrasted tone values. Shyu Ruey-Shiann juxtaposes warm natural material with cold industrial metals and mechanical parts. A complexity of spatial rhythms has been composed in his knetic art. To a certain extent, the industrial material finds its precursor in modern western art, while the clean simple form and dry sound echo Zen philosophy.  Shyu has recently moved from Taipei to New York. His kinetic art installation is not only about a moving image but also the object of motion. Unusually for kinetic art, the mechanical part of Shyu’s work dissolves into his concept; his cool iron pieces transmit a retrospective image that draw a nostalgic atmosphere. To provide contrast, he uses not only worked metals but also natural materials. Some of his work hangs from the ceiling, and one piece involves small boats that float on the invisible ocean of our memory.

Position makes it possible to see an object from different perspectives. For example, looking at the supernatural shows a different facet of nature. One has to change one’s position. Danto announced the death of representation,[7] and Huang Po Chih has freed himself from the constraints of representation. He uses scanners to produce distorted digital images of flowers, images that assault our eyes.  Huang’s Flov"er piece unifies the letters in the two words "flower" and "love," and for him the meaning is a love that never ceases to flow. During the process of creating his animation-like flower, he shifts the position of the flower to preserve a sense of a shadow, a residual three-dimensionality. The level of resolution rivals that of the images produced by microscopic photography. He spent four months and scanned more than 10,000 image files, and with photo-editing software, every scanned photo was retouched and modified. The culmination was a merging of all these edited pictures into an animation of dancing flowers. What surprises us is the unfamiliarly fine texture, which is decorative yet not pictorial.

To question the internal and external, either from the inside out or from the outside is only to see a partial world. The flat, industrial realism painting of Fan Yang Chung,  looks at another slice of city scenery that has been neglected. He takes fragmentary views of airplanes. These paintings are without affect and seemingly lack design or ornamentation, producing very industrial images, despite the fact that Fan uses more traditional materials, such as oil on canvas. The result is a contemporary image, by which the artist refers to the metaphor of travel as a locus of dislocation and alienation in modern life.

Yuan Guan Ming projects a video image which takes the living environment as subject. Overlapping city landscapes present a changing view of metropolitan buildings. His video images switch between the place he resides and the Glenfiddich distillery in Scotland, where he won a residency for 6 months. This piece ties together far and near places, and intertwines his memory of the forest. In the 2007 solo exhibition  Disappearing Landscape, Yuan made  a concerted effort to change his creative direction by recording moments from daily life which he found in the home, the environment, and nature.

Motion needn’t only be physical moving, but may be expressed as film, video, or performance to indicate a change in location or position. The effect can be  paradoxical –there is movement, but no change in position or size as in Marcel Duchamp’s Rotorelief  set of cardboard disks[8]. A labor-consuming piece created by Chen Chun Hao uses thousands of push pins to make geometrical two-dimensional “Targets” painting-like works, where the subtle shining of the surface of the push pins creates a smooth, mechanical, and industrial appearance. Projects of this kind may be said to engage in a physiological optics, a type of retina painting. What is more, their reflections may cause optical illusions. Strangely, as the viewer moves, the art seems to move as well. This gives the work a restless, charged air, which of course clashes with its seemingly impassive mode of presentation. Its both analogical and symbolic.

Viewer participation has been acclaimed since “Creative Act”[9] from 1915.  Chiu Chao Tsai’s interactive installations mix optical art and language concepts. In his piece called Betwixt, the challenge has been to articulate the relationship between the artist and the audience. The Chinese characters corresponding to the four words You, I, She, and Him are formed when the viewer slowly slides the metal bars attached to Betwixt.  This forces the viewer to define a relationship with the art. Of course, Tsai runs two risks with this art. First, language restricts the work. Second, the viewer needs to take an more active role than usual.

Wonderland

“ I like the word ‘belief.’ In general when people say ‘I know’ they don’t know, they believe… to live is to believe; that is my belief, at any rate.” [10]A wonderland only exists in its own time and space. It might suggest a tranquility of spirit. A fertile imagination makes a flower grow in the middle of a concrete floor, an ancient goddess transform to a modern working lady, or pervades a forest with the metaphysical, purifying the soul and spreading harmony.  Eun Young Choi has created a garden that turns out to be a Wonderland.  In Choi’s installation, black vinyl has been cut into a decorated floral ivy–like pattern, that meanders up and down, left and right along the wall and around the windows. It is an organic form that upon closer investigation might be molecular – perhaps some type of microscopic creature that swims by the windows. The paisley shapes hint at a classic Persian weavings. Groups of bouncing bluish balls complicate the issue and infiltrate an organic crowd that may be either under the sea or in the crown of a tree.  She is also fond of using stickers applied to mylar to form flowers, blue sky, butterflies, cartoon characters, and other denizens of the dreamscape. Choi not only shares with us the moment of childish innocence and joy or colorful narratives but also provides an open-ended forum that absorbs diverse expressions.

A deer raises his head from a forest to watch audiences in a city museum.  Aihua Hsia suggests a forest wonderland where she captures a Buddhist god of ancient Indian legend; this god – so the story goes – was changed into a human for fighting too much with the other gods. Via changes of costume and posture, Hsia transforms him into a girl because she feels that the battles the god-turned-human must fight are all too familiar to women. The artist accentuates these primitive and simple forms stemming from antiquity with the traditional material of lacquer. Hsia studied in Japan, where lacquerware has been used on a daily basis for the past thousand years. Lacquer is associated primarily with Asia, and thus the materials and techniques participate in their own stereotypical myths. The subjects she chooses are all from a forest, a secret garden in the forest, and are populated by fairies, pixies, or the forest god of the garden or locale.

In a cartoon movie, a group of animals escape from the boring jungle. Wandering through the urban jungle, overwhelmed by the noisy buildings, they end up by losing their freedom in circus cages. The city wonderland is in hindsight a place of slow death. Lu Chih Yun’s sculpture is the epitome of elegant popular art; it is a group of toy-like flamingos, radiating an unnatural dayglow pink evocative of industrial pollution. The statement of the artist confirms that the color of the flamingoes results from chemicals ingested in the polluted world. While flamingos are normally associated with wild expanses, these birds with their heads emerging from flower pots – transplanted, as it were - are inextricably linked with the urban environment. Lu has thus chosen subjects that are neither Asian nor, in her depiction, exotic. These flamingos are a paradigm of reduplication, and thus reify the tension between the artistic ideal of individuality and the industrial holy grail of standardization . Hence is proposed a new aesthetics.

Exploring an underground treasure land or a long tunnel leading toward a cave are normal parts of childhood play. In Huang Pey Yin’s amusement park, discarded industrial or corrugated paper forms site-specific installations. They create stylized rocks for scholar gardens. Paper has been used successfully as a sculptural material before – for example by Chen Longbin a Taiwanese artist in New York who challenges reading sculpture, or by the architect Frank Gehry’s famous cardboard furniture.

Pan Ping Yu uses media associated with feminism such as needles and thread to comment, without participating in feminism’s claims of oppression. Nevertheless, Pan wishes to avoid categorization as a feminist because she is interested in deeper questions such as the relationship between myth and contemporary life.  Her art recalls the artist’s childhood spent at the seashore. Pan creates from fabric a three dimensional free-hanging sculpture in the shape of a seashell; the use of material and the fact that it is hollow gives the piece an immeasurable weightlessness.

Children are a popular subject in this new age of reassurance. Shiau Da Yi also works with fabric, a conscious choice on his part because of the associations between textiles and tradition, previous agrarian generations, and nostalgia for the motherland. Even his work showing flowers printed on the face of a child harks back to the floral images so frequently gracing traditional textiles. At the same time that these pieces comment on the indelible influence of the past on the future, Shiau complicates his message either by an irreverent grin on his subject’s face or by the overabundance of multi-colored flowers.

Hidden Garden

Hidden Gardens can be inside the city, where people enjoy life in private spaces. Large cities are full of gardens, a landscape that lies beyond nature. To uncover its multicultural art is to discover the secret gardens of the city, and find the city’s heart.  Asian artists rely on multiple perspectives to create a startling landscape of the mind. Global cities are full of culture, containing new and old, rich and poor, passion and coldness, constancy and change.

In the city jungle, artists suppress ordinary views to express secret gardens of the mind and private apartment space.

 Japanese artist Karoruko Nakano’s female images illustrate a mixture of ethnicities, some of which use collages of Japanese fabric and Nakano’s drawing. These collage paintings borrow liberally from comic and cartoon characters and stylize all fashion female images. Recalling Klimt’s paintings, the artist uses decorated illustration to relate stories of the intimacy of urban girls. Still clinging to her younger stardom in Japan, the artist has predominately chosen to depict scenes from Tokyo. Recently, she has broadened her scope to other urban areas. Nakano’s female figures reveal a desire to show their bodies in front of each other without any shame. Some of the images picture a third person who talks about another girl’s private stories, or maybe directs a male gaze at the girl. But the females in the paintings are very relaxed, enjoying their situations. Either in color or in black and white, these paintings sport a very decorative line. Sometimes the pattern applied to the hair of women in the paintings is kimono fabric; the delicate lines provide a direct exotic and erotic appearance.

Liu Shih Tung makes pleasant amusing art by cutting paper images, gluing them, and applying paint. Flower grow up on the pig head is a hilarious red paper cutting that has been glued to canvas. The combination seems very tentative. Will it amuse you or is the artist poking fun at himself or the audience by employing (Piere Cabanne, Dialogues with Marcel DuChamp, 106) randomly-chosen but very serious details, making a structure and gluing it. Tung chosen life is cutting and grouping and gluing He uses materials from folk life, such as decorated flowers, dishes, fragmented figures or faces, and his final collages from a distance look like a  flat cloth that earlier times. But when the viewer contemplates it carefully, a colorful pattern emerges to reveal a face, and a image with decorated format. One painting describes a legendary immortal in a bottle carried by immortals. It symbolizes treasures inside. The flying line and decorated floral and bright color, seduce the viewer to enter the hidden garden.

In the ancient legent book, a fox pixie admires the talent of a scholar  and visits him in a dream. Thus starts a tragic fairy love story between man and animal. Ancient pornography painting has increasingly been revealed and studied, just as night club, denizens are fallen into the eagerness, fame, and sexual desire of the urban landscape.  Yao Jui Chung studied ancient x-rated books and intimate pictures from inside palace gardens or the private gardens of the wealthy

In Chung’s gardens, a literati studies in his library alone, or a number of the literati meet; they paint, play music, drink tea or wine, and get drunk. Another story begins with an accidental meeting with the daughters of a rich family, from which unfold affairs unacceptable to their parents. It might be the concubines of a secret garden that find the lonely imperial life unbearable. Therefore the secret garden became the setting of much immoral desire and secret affairs that led to many subjects for the storyteller. Yao imitates the pornography found in ancient pictures of mythical love stories. Even the colors applied are typical of the Chinese Northern style and Jie Hua.[11]

In a city back garden, the hardships of immigrant labor replace the relationship between human beings and nature with the relationship between human labor and mechanical power. Chen Ching Yao conflates the past – as represented in Tian Gong Kao Wu[12] a traditional book about the coordination between human beings and nature and cooperation between labor power and natural power - with current personalities to make digital books. The artist observed the dramatic changes of industrial structure in Taiwan and the superabundance of imported workers from Southeast Asia. In Yao’s book, workers and farmers are replaced with foreign workers from Southeast Asia wearing  Ming Dynasty attire; while traditional industries also have been transformed by the changing industrial structure and labor power in Taiwan in the 21st Century. In works of the Tian Gong Kao Wu series, the artist cited the general prejudice that foreign labors or brides in Taiwan typically engage in nursing, babysitting, factory work, walking dogs, or cooking. A funky combination with a black mockery and these ambivalences are revealed.

In this garden theme, we are not trying to entertain the guest and obtain their pleasant attentions, but pointing to a broad metaphysical strain in the works. The ultimate issue in the work is to provide a trace and patina of the time. The various paintings and installations expose the endless cycle of consumption and reproduction of city garden. By ultimately looking over all the work, we see gardens transcending economic and political issues. Just as nature is always changing, the species that play a major role in the drama, like characters and actors are eventfully rotated. A truth of the universe - humans are in transit in the city and in the world. Stories left in the garden can also be distorted. In other words, in the secret garden celebrity doesn’t carry any weight. The flowers blossom and fade, then re-blossom and the sprout is reborn again in another spatial resolution, and so imaginary entry into it again. The cycle revolves and changes like daily incantations, we offer an eloquent meditation on cities daily movement, with mutability and eternal rhythms.



Three figures:
1. Pollution Solution
2. Georgia O'KeeffeCow's Skull: Red, White, and Blue”





[1] Peony Pavilion is a love play that takes place in Nan-an. Tu Li-niang is the daughter of a high official. One day she dreams she loves a scholar called Liu Meng-mei. After that, she is ill for longing and soon dies. Later, by chance  Liu takes shelter in the Tu family summer compound while on his way to take an examination. In Miss Tu's room, he finds her portrait. Strangely enough, the girl comes back to life. They leave together without telling her father and Liu takes the examination .Later, a fight begins. Tu sends her husband to look in her father. But the elderly Tu refuses to accept the fact that his daughter is still alive, so he puts Liu into prison. Finally, he is rescued by an official party in search of the scholar who had come out first in the imperial examination and proves successively his claims, with the help of his resurrected wife.
[2] By the Light of the Glow-worm Lamp, by Alberto Manquel, Plume,1998
[3] Duan Huang Cave, is a repository of old paintings, one of which shows the flying robe of a fairy beauty extending straight into the air The cave was the gateway to the ancient Silk Route.
[4] The statement of her Endless poem is “Engaging in too much to drop for our life, live and survive with endless word.”

[5] Nihonga involves ‘iwa-enogu’ (rock pigments). These pigments are derived from natural minerals, shells, corals, and even semi-precious stones. Powders are ground to 10 gradations from fine to sand grain textures. The finer the powder, the lighter the color. The use of sumi and ‘gofun’ and these powders with ‘nikawa’ (glue) and water, applied by brush on washi paper is Nihonga. Up to 1500 basic colors can be mixed and layered in a single painting. The beauty lies in its natural matte finish and the brilliance of pigments.

[6] A dancer and a painter mix their medium to create a new art form; their work was presented at the Taipei International Art Fair in November ,2001.  Pushing the Envelope in Art and Dance at TAF! Jerome F. Keating Ph.D.  O chestnut tree, great-rooted blossomer. Are you the leaf, the blossom, or the bole?
O body swayed to music, O brightening glance, How can we know the dancer from the dance?
("Among School Children" – W.B. Yeats)
 
[7] ‘Narratives of the End of Art” in Danto (1990), p344. “..that anything, if a work of art, can be matched by something that looks just like it which is not one, so the difference between art and non-art cannot rest in what they have in common…”
[8] “Where’s Poppa?” Rosalind Krauss. The Definitively Unfinished Marcel Duchamp(1993). p. 444
[9] Duchamp recognized the importance of “the spectator who later becomes posterity.” Ibid p. 14.
[10] “Given” Eric Cameron. Ibid p. 6. quoting Marcel Duchamp in conversation with James Johnson Sweeney .
[11] Chinese landscape painting from the Ming and later periods has been divided into two schools. Southern ink painting is thought to be more decorative and heavy in color. Northern ink painting  is thought to be more geometric and colorful.
Court painting or Jie Hua refers to the accurate depiction of architectural forms. Jie is a classical term of measurement; Hua is painting. So Jie Hua is architectural painting skill , using measurement.

[12] Tian Gong Kao Wu is a Chinese technological encyclopedia published in 1697, during the Ming Dynasty. This book recorded all methods of producing and growing in detail, including plowing, weaving, shipbuilding, iron making, paper making, sericiculture and so on.

curatorial essay for the exhibition
Contemporary Secret Garden, 2010

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