Monday, August 17, 2020

Eric C. Chiang - Energy Flow in Connecticut Rivers


Blue Matterhorn , Oil on canvas, 72" x 48", 2020
The gallery section of my studio at the AmFab building in Bridgeport, CT
To glance at Eric Chiang's studio. Don't forget to turn on your speakers.
https://youtu.be/S-jSHVd0L78

Eric is a full time professional artist; his artwork has been exhibited in National Taiwan Museum of Fine Arts in Taipei , Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth, Queens Museum in New York, New Britain Museum of American Arts, Mattatuck Museum, Westport Arts Center (Now MoCA Westport), Silvermine Guild Gallery, Carriage Barn Arts Center, Bruce Kershner Gallery, Schelfhaudt Gallery in Connecticut, and many other venues and communities.  
In September 2016, Eric Chiang was given a Citation from the New York State Assembly for his outstanding artwork about humanity.
Eric grew up in Taiwan where he received art training from regular school programs. Aspiring to become an artist, he spent most of his youth absorbing history and techniques of art creation and classical music composition from all sources he could find.
Prompted by the economic situation in Taiwan at that time, his life took a big detour. After obtaining degrees from National Taiwan University and New York University, he started a long and successful IT management career on Wall Street. Nevertheless, his desire to create art grew stronger than ever. He committed to painting daily despite his extremely demanding corporate responsibilities. Decades later, Eric became a full-time artist.
In addition to creating art that explores the meaning of existence, showing his empathy for pan-human desperation, love, connections, and hope, he is very active in leading organizations connecting individual artists to each other, as well as artists to the public.
Water Lyrics & Music , Oil on Linen,
24" x 30", 2016
Memory of Connecticut shoreline oil on canvas,
12" x 12", 2020
Blue Tahoe , Oil on canvas, 48" x 72", 2020
Interview video : Westport Library with Eric C. Chiang (Artists in Residency)
https://youtu.be/XqFKV8RxcAo
Westport Library's Interview with Eric Chiang (Artists in Residency)
(left) Civilizations & Connectedness I, [Series:"Are we born connected?"], Acrylic on canvas, 60" x 48", 2012
(mid) Blue Rhapsody of Swan Lake, Oil on Canvas, 36" x 36", 2014
(right) Song of Constellations, [Series: "Are we born connected?"], Acrylic on canvas, 60" x 48", 2012
2020 solicitude
In his latest series, Eric kept his strokes in the background while carefully omitting all pleasant spiritual beauty. The dark area pertains to flesh hiding behind its own dazzling instrumental light. The pandemic brings us back to solidarity and an irritable, restless and dark silent era. On a black background but visible from a considerable distance. we want to stay hidden from the violent world, and build disguise in a fresh nature and cosmos.
Video Jul 01, 14 45 12
The Year 2020, No.1.  
oil & acrylic on canvas, 30" x 60"
The Year 2020, No.2, oil on canvas, 40" x 30"
The below link is a performance ("Shore, Island, and Chelonia") on December 22, 2018 at the Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth, where Yuan-Chen Li's music was premiered -- she played the piano. Five of Eric's 12 paintings in the " Land Scripts" series were on the stage, augmented with a marine video and plastics gathered in a fish net.

Music composed by Yuan-Chen Li
Paintings, installation & audience interaction design by Eric C Chiang;
Clarinetist Yi-Wen Chen
https://youtu.be/KA9Aug7EQ6E
World premier of "Shore, Island, & Chelonia" (mv. II) at Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth 12/22/2018
More information:
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Upcoming Exhibition
Silvermine Guild Artists Exhibition
Jul 18 - Aug 20, 2020
​1037 Silvermine Road, New Canaan, CT
Current Exhibition 
Do or Die (Beethoven's 250th Birthday )
Feb 27 - TBD
Beechwood Arts @ Westport Library

" Small is the new big ",
Apr 26 - Jun 26, 2020
at the Rene Soto Gallery 
1 Wall Street, Norwalk, CT

Landscripts VIII, IX, & X , oil on (3) canvases, 60"Hx144"W

Tangwei Hsu : Adventures in self-referential, multi-level spatial possibilities: a new generation of sculpture in public spaces

Adventures in self-referential, multi-level spatial possibilities:

 a new generation of sculpture in public spaces

The world changes constantly; we are unable to control what will be. We only know access to the arts is intrinsic to a high quality of life at any moment.

by Luchia Meihua Lee, Curator

With freedom of texture, mind, hand, space, and meaning, Tang-Wei Hsu creates art that is neither heavy nor sentimental. Whether intentionally playful or not, his objects are accessible to general audiences as public murals, and at green hills, playgrounds, metro entrances, museums, and other places. The parts - organic and in motion - depart drastically from the norm of independent existence and revel in their connectivity. Viewers instinctively desire to penetrate the labyrinths.We hope your interest is piqued and you do not begrudge praise and admiration.       

We may take the 1965 exhibition New Generation at Whitechapel Art Gallery as the herald of a distinct school of abstract sculpture, whose object was "the totals or unities created by man in his attempt to understand and control the world" [note 1]. While contemporary pop and graffiti in the US, or anime or manga in Asia, are far removed from the scope of the New Generation artists, their concerns for abstraction, for the essence of sculpture, for total artistic responsibility for effect and medium, predicate the sculpture of contemporary artists such as Taiwanese American Tang-Wei Hsu. If Superflat [note 2] is essentially Warholian, then I would characterize Hsu as attempting to catch the whole universe in a welter of symbolic fecundity.

His objects are coated with pleasant, soft, and primitive colors and lines that nevertheless fail to lend stability - indeed they covertly undermine it. Hsu thus develops an open, airy art language, through seemingly conducting a discourse of abstract animation to determine space or the physical world. Even though there is a definite artistic commonality with graffiti and street murals, the antisocial element has been completely eradicated in Hsu's work. Thematically, he rails against the orderliness of aesthetic limits, stylistically diminishing a principle of symmetrical two dimensional balance, and has blithely deconstructed the division between two and three dimensions, between sculpture and drawing, remanding medium to irrelevance and enthroning content and form that generate excitement regarding the surface of works. 

In terms of cultural provenance, Hsu was born and reached artistic maturity in Taiwan, in an atmosphere of global integrated notions of individual recognition. As a consequence, his artistic consciousness ranges from microscopic to universal and has no bounds. Whether in murals or sculpture, Hsu's concept involves endless and detailed correspondence that ricochets between a child's dream, scientific imagination, and fantastical allegory. Nevertheless, his architectural background allows him to take a methodical approach to the liberation of symbolic systems.

If we look for the portals of culture, we find that they have been thrown open and thus the sense of art must rely more heavily on artistic imaginative form; by contrast, historically the source of cultural symbols is the mystery of religious ecstasy. [note 3]

The modern skill of deploying self-consciously expressive art for the dissolution of the social hierarchy has empowered and legitimized the moving into the public space that is graffiti, mural, or street art. Yet beyond any art historical trend, Hsu's mysteriously fluid graphic line - dripping liquidity beyond nature - leaps beyond culture, beyond narrative science fiction. His creative drive is boundlessly infinitizing his art spirit and thus creating his radical self. It is far from the monolithic norm.

When I am saying Hsu has liberated his hand and mind in these works, I do not wish to minimize the difficulty of his art construction in accordance with a systematic or established form or procedure. The images and the objects that are revealed are interconnected in the body of works which gives them context. When following a smooth line, a shape, or color, we are locked into a structure that flows in then out as through an explosion of imagination without effort. Here, we capture a discourse on extensive reinterpretation. Therefore, instead of overvaluing entry on some level and deriving currency from sensationalism, I refer to the 1986 comment by Jeff Koons: "I would like to offer up a term that has had vital currency in the process of my own thinking: contingency. I think that through this procession of contingencies, discourses are being pulled together into the object itself, promoting an awareness if the fact that all meaning are contingent upon some other meaning where meanings are appropriated for their relationship to eternal forces, the larger social schema in which they're involved" [note 4.] 

 

 

https://youtu.be/P29Ay6PUezM   Tang-Wei Hsu Mural Graffiti

Notes:

[1] The Moment of Modernism: Modernist Art, 13. William Tucker (1935-??) & Tim Scott (1937-?) 'Reflections on Sculpture" in Art in Theory 1900-2000, An Anthology of Changing Ideas, ed. C. Harrison & P. Wood, 2002. Blackwell: MA, Oxford, pp.801

[2] "[Takashi Murakami] is known for] Superflat art theory—a postmodern art movement—as well as devising an artistic genre wholly of his own".https://www.crfashionbook.com/mens/a32405824/takashi-murakami-art-superflat-louis-vuitton/ ,BY JENNIFER SAUER, MAY 8, 2020 [site accessed on Aug 10, 2020]

[3] op. cit. Idea of Postmodern:The Condition of History, 1. Daniel Bell (1919-?) from 'Modernism and Capitalism' p. 1117-1122

[4] ibid. Ideas of the Postmodern: The Critique of Originality, 11. 'From Criticism to Complicity' p.1051-1054


Artist to Watch: Tangwei Hsu 許唐瑋: Fantasy on the Universe  http://conta.cc/349idUz



The world changes constantly; we are unable to control what will be. We only know access to the arts is intrinsic to a high quality of life at any moment.

With freedom of texture, mind, hand, space, and meaning, Tang-Wei Hsu creates art that is neither heavy nor sentimental. Whether intentionally playful or not, his objects are accessible to general audiences as public murals, and at green hills, playgrounds, metro entrances, museums, and other places. The parts - organic and in motion - depart drastically from the norm of independent existence and revel in their connectivity. Viewers instinctively desire to penetrate the labyrinths.

We hope your interest is piqued and you do not begrudge praise and admiration.
Tang-Wei Hsu 許唐瑋
Fantasy on the Universe

Floating Travel, 2020, fiberglass, stainless steel, metal paint, L17ft x W12ft x H3.6ft, public art at Taoyuan International Airport Terminal 2, Taoyuan, Taiwan.
Adventures in self-referential, multi-level spatial possibilities: a new generation of sculpture in public spaces
We may take the 1965 exhibition New Generation at Whitechapel Art Gallery as the herald of a distinct school of abstract sculpture, whose object was "the totals or unities created by man in his attempt to understand and control the world" [note 1]. While contemporary pop and graffiti in the US, or anime or manga in Asia, are far removed from the scope of the New Generation artists, their concerns for abstraction, for the essence of sculpture, for total artistic responsibility for effect and medium, predicate the sculpture of contemporary artists such as Taiwanese American Tang-Wei Hsu. If Superflat [note 2] is essentially Warholian, then I would characterize Hsu as attempting to catch the whole universe in a welter of symbolic fecundity.

His objects are coated with pleasant, soft, and primitive colors and lines that nevertheless fail to lend stability - indeed they covertly undermine it. Hsu thus develops an open, airy art language, through seemingly conducting a discourse of abstract animation to determine space or the physical world. Even though there is a definite artistic commonality with graffiti and street murals, the antisocial element has been completely eradicated in Hsu's work. Thematically, he rails against the orderliness of aesthetic limits, stylistically diminishing a principle of symmetrical two dimensional balance, and has blithely deconstructed the division between two and three dimensions, between sculpture and drawing, remanding medium to irrelevance and enthroning content and form that generate excitement regarding the surface of works.

In terms of cultural provenance, Hsu was born and reached artistic maturity in Taiwan, in an atmosphere of global integrated notions of individual recognition. As a consequence, his artistic consciousness ranges from microscopic to universal and has no bounds. Whether in murals or sculpture, Hsu's concept involves endless and detailed correspondence that ricochets between a child's dream, scientific imagination, and fantastical allegory. Nevertheless, his architectural background allows him to take a methodical approach to the liberation of symbolic systems.
Documentary of Mural at Yinchuan Museum of Contemporary Art in 2018

"In this exhibition, I presented a large-scale mural painting about 13 meters high, and painted a large-scale exhibition room. I hope that when the audience enters this space, it finds a colorful, macroscopic and microscopic visual experience. Occupying all available space seems to extend the imagination of the space field."

- Tang-Wei Hsu
Relaxation – The Secret Garden of Cartoon Fantasy, 2018 exhibition at Yinchuan Museum of Contemporary Art, China (銀川當代美術館)
If we look for the portals of culture, we find that they have been thrown open and thus the sense of art must rely more heavily on artistic imaginative form; by contrast, historically the source of cultural symbols is the mystery of religious ecstasy. [note 3]
The modern skill of deploying self-consciously expressive art for the dissolution of the social hierarchy has empowered and legitimized the moving into the public space that is graffiti, mural, or street art. Yet beyond any art historical trend, Hsu's mysteriously fluid graphic line - dripping liquidity beyond nature - leaps beyond culture, beyond narrative science fiction. His creative drive is boundlessly infinitizing his art spirit and thus creating his radical self. It is far from the monolithic norm.
Partial view of Youth Freestyle, 2019, Fiberglass, stainless steel, metal paint, LED lamps, L6.5ft x W6.5ft x H11.6ft. public art project at the Taichung North District Sports Center, Taichung, Taiwan.
Tang-Wei Hsu 許唐瑋

Tang-Wei Hsu (b. 1980 Taiwan) is an international artist based in New York. He is a recipient of the Asian Cultural Council Fellowship (2009) and was a resident artist of the international studio & curatorial program, Brooklyn (2011).
He gained a BA in Architecture from Shih Chien University, Taipei and an MFA in Visual Arts from Tainan National University of the Arts, Tainan, Taiwan.

After relocating to New York in 2011, Hsu participated in many local and international exhibitions such as "Crystal Cave", ASYMMETRIK Gallery, New York(2016); “Across The Pacific”, LAM Gallery, California(2016); “On & On: Art Without End”, Mark Miller Gallery, New York(2015); Outdoor exhibitions include 4heads:GIAF, New York(2016,2013&2012); DUMBO Arts Festival, New York(2013).

An interpretative video by Tang-Wei Hsu about Youth Freestyle-Spirit of Sport

Youth Freestyle is an example of Hsu's public art. It is set up at Taichung North Sports Center. Harmonizing with the activities at the sports center and accompanied by a course for art activities for students,Youth Freestyle consists of three separate pieces. One is placed on the grass, the second is a large-scale work that runs through the first and second floors, and the third is a complete set of seats for the public to rest and use for art. Hsu's architectural background is very much in evidence in this project.


As an international artist, he travels widely for varied projects and installations in locales as diverse as Taiwan, Hong Kong, Singapore, Denmark, Australia, the USA, and so on. In 2013, Hsu collaborated with New York City DOT (Department of Transportation) and carried out a public art installation project, Magic Monkeys, at 9th Avenue and 36th Street in Manhattan. His work was shown in Sculpture By The Sea in Denmark (2015) and Cottesloe, Sydney, Australia (2016, 2018).
Hsu's large-scale stainless steel sculptures and the drawings of creatures and organic patterns are seen as his individual signature and art language; they have gradually gained him worldwide publicity.
Welcome to the Galaxy Railway, 2009,Fiberglass, stainless steel, metal paint, LED lamps, public art project of Museum of Contemporary Art, Taipei, Taiwan
Partial view of Youth Freestyle, 2019, Fiberglass, stainless steel, metal paint, LED lamps, L10ft x W10ft x H33ft. Taichung North District Sports Center, Taichung, Taiwan.
When I am saying Hsu has liberated his hand and mind in these works, I do not wish to minimize the difficulty of his art construction in accordance with a systematic or established form or procedure. The images and the objects that are revealed are interconnected in the body of works which gives them context. When following a smooth line, a shape, or color, we are locked into a structure that flows in then out as through an explosion of imagination without effort. Here, we capture a discourse on extensive reinterpretation. Therefore, instead of overvaluing entry on some level and deriving currency from sensationalism, I refer to the 1986 comment by Jeff Koons: "I would like to offer up a term that has had vital currency in the process of my own thinking: contingency. I think that through this procession of contingencies, discourses are being pulled together into the object itself, promoting an awareness if the fact that all meaning are contingent upon some other meaning where meanings are appropriated for their relationship to eternal forces, the larger social schema in which they're involved" [note 4.]

-- Luchia Meihua Lee, Curator

Notes:
[1] The Moment of Modernism: Modernist Art, 13. William Tucker (1935-??) & Tim Scott (1937-?) 'Reflections on Sculpture" in Art in Theory 1900-2000, An Anthology of Changing Ideas, ed. C. Harrison & P. Wood, 2002. Blackwell: MA, Oxford, pp.801
[2] "[Takashi Murakami] is known for] Superflat art theory—a postmodern art movement—as well as devising an artistic genre wholly of his own".https://www.crfashionbook.com/mens/a32405824/takashi-murakami-art-superflat-louis-vuitton/ ,BY JENNIFER SAUER, MAY 8, 2020 [site accessed on Aug 10, 2020]
[3] op. cit. Idea of Postmodern:The Condition of History, 1. Daniel Bell (1919-?) from 'Modernism and Capitalism' p. 1117-1122
[4] ibid. Ideas of the Postmodern: The Critique of Originality, 11. 'From Criticism to Complicity' p.1051-1054
Fengyuan Pastry Sculptures, 2019, Fiberglass, stainless steel, metal paint, LED lamps, Taichung World Flora Exposition, Fengyuan Huludun Park, Taiwan. (台中花卉博覽會, 豐原葫蘆墩園區)

Monkey Magic, continues Hsu’s use of anime and science fiction-influenced graphics. This totemic sculpture references the ancient Asian fable, Three Monkeys, and the classic novel Journey to the West, as well as Hsu’s own experience in New York where he has lived intermittently for the past three years. Adorned with symbols of both landscape and manufacturing, the sculpture extends into the surrounding bustle, offering a brief respite to passersby.
night view of the Fengyuan Pastry Sculptures, 2019, Taichung World Flora Exposition, Fengyuan Huludun Park, Taiwan.
Fantastic Planet, 2011. Fiberglass, stainless steel, metal paint, LED lamps, L10ft x W10ft x H28ft. Nangang train station F area, Taipei , Taiwan
Pocono Bud, Sculpture by the Sea 2, 2018, Fiberglass, stainless steel, metal paint, L6ft x W6ft x H13ft. Cottesloe, Perth, Australia
partial view of Maze Coordinates, 2018, Beyond Gallery, Taipei, Taiwan (迷宮的座標) documentary video: https://youtu.be/B__Kx5eyfi4
Best Wishes for You, 2011, glass curtain output, vinyl cut sheet in National Taiwan Museum of Fine Art, Taiwan. 29.5 ft x 29.5 ft
Selected video documentary of Tang-Wei Hsu

Youtube:
Tang-Wei Hsu Mural Graffiti


許唐瑋 Public Art:[ Youth Freestyle-spirit of sport ] by Tang-Wei Hsu

Maze Coordinate 迷宮的座標- Solo Exhibition By Tang-Wei Hsu

Tang-Wei Hsu 許唐瑋 Artworks -Group Show in stART up LA
Shan Shui Boundle, 2017, Sculpture By The Sea, Aarhus, Danmark
Hsu imagined a secret garden beside the beautiful Aarhus coast. The artist hoped the viewers would feel as if they are walking in an imaginary landscape, interspersed with real and illusory scenery. The smooth painted metal surfaces as well as the stainless steel-like mirrors reflect the sea and sky.
Contact: info@taac-us.org if you are interesting to support this artist in any creative way.