TAIPEI.- Taipei Fine Arts Museum announced an international participating list of 39 participants from 18 countries and territories for the 12th edition of the Taipei Biennial, scheduled from October 24, 2020 to February 28, 2021 at Taipei Fine Arts Museum. Co-curated by Bruno Latour and Martin Guinard with Eva Lin (public programs), and titled You and I Dont Live on the Same Planet, this years biennial aims to introduce political and diplomatic tactics into the realm of environmental discussions.
Bruno Latour and Martin Guinard relate, It seems that the divisions on ecological questions are so great that disagreements are no longer about differences of vision or point of view about the world but a question of the material nature of the very planet that we are talking about. Ecology has continuously tried to unify us all so that a collective action would take place. Metaphorically speaking, this was done through the use of an emblem: the blue planet seen from the moon. They further elaborate on their hypothesis, This call to unification has continuously been made in such a rush, that it has actually slowed down the political process that should take place. What is needed now is a real-politic which actually takes seriously the ecological implications of the ground on which it stands.
In this context the curators hope to trigger what Latour calls new diplomatic encounters. Diplomacy is defined as a set of skills, procedures, and habits of thought which occur either before or after a situation of conflict. The key feature of a diplomatic encounter is that there is no arbiter, referee, or judge who would sit above the situation to decide who is right or wrong about an issue. It is precisely because there is no such a judge that diplomacy is necessary. In the fictional space of the exhibition, we wish to multiply those encounters to mimic what would be needed in the real world.
The curatorial theme and concept were announced back in September 2019, after the curators conducted a field research in Taiwan. During their stay, which lasted over a month, they visited a number of local scholars, including Daiwie Fu, Zhihong Wang, Hsiang-lin Lei, Wenhua Kuo and many others. Together, they started conversations that spanned across fields such as political science, sociology, geology, marine science, as well as humanities and history, endeavoring to lay down a solid foundation for this years biennial. Ms. Ping Lin, Director of TFAM, expressed her belief that all the experimental dialogues between human and the non-human perspectives demonstrate the uniqueness of this biennial. Furthermore, these academic dialogues may contribute to future research in these fields and spread the issue and message of the biennial far beyond the original scope of the exhibition, thus transcending the limitations of space and time inherent in the nature of such events and prompting new conceptual encounters for the academic fields and the general public alike.
The two curators also highlighted their goal to transform the exhibition into a fieldwork. To achieve this goal, they proposed to Eva Lin to join the team in order to benefit from her experience in both within and outside of the museum context. One of the highlights of the program will be the Theater of Negotiations, in cooperation with local scholars from the Taiwan Science, Technology and Society (STS) Association and their students. The first step will be based on a research effort where the participants will look at some of the controversies in Taiwanese society by carefully studying the role of each stakeholder involved. The second step will be a reenactment taking place at TFAM where each of the participants will endorse the role of these stakeholders and negotiate according to their divergent agendas.
The exhibition will be organized as a planetarium, where each artist depicts a certain pull of gravity. For example, Aruwai Kaumakans practice is characteristic of what Latour calls the Terrestrial Planet. As a former jewelry maker, she decided in 2008, after a violent Typhoon devastated her village, to upscale her productions so that she could work collaboratively with members of her community, using weaving as a resilient and social fabric. This grounded approach presents a sharp contrast with the off-shore and limitless space of the Global Planet, depicted by artists such as Antonio Vega Macotela. The latter has initiated a fairly unusual collaboration with a textile atelier (Marisol Centeno Studio) and the local craftsmen with hackers. Together they encrypted within the mesh of large tapestries information related to tax evaders, whose capital flows through borders and escape the tax system put in place in the boundaries of their nation states. Based on the planetary approach, the curatorial team will continue to build upon this framework.
The list of participants and participating groups are: (in alphabetical order)
Curators:
Bruno Latour & Martin Guinard with Eva Lin (Public Programs)
Advisors:
Chuang Chun-Mei, Huang Chien Hung, Yuk Hui, Hung Kuang-Chi, Paul Jobin, Tsai Ming Jiun, Wu Mali
Participants
Aruwai Kaumakan / Erika Balsom and Grégory Castéra (Council), with Daniel Steegman Mangrané / June Balthazard & Pierre Pauze / Hicham Berrada / Cemelesai Dakivali / Chang Yung-Ta / Chen Yin-Ju / Cooking Sections (Daniel Fernández Pascual & Alon Schwabe) / Cui Jie / Emkal Eyongakpa / Fablab Dynamic / Anne-Charlotte Finel / Jean-Michel Frodon & Rasha Salti / Femke Herregraven / DJ Hatfield / Hai-Hsin Huang / Hamedine Kane & Stéphane Verlet-Bottéro with the help of Olivia Anani, Lou Mo & Nathalie Muchamad / Jean Katambayi Mukendi / Navine G. Khan-Dossos / Franck Leibovici & Julien Seroussi / Antonio Vega Macotela / Marianne Morild / Fernando Palma Rodriguez / Mika Rottenberg / Jonas Staal / Daniel Steegmann Mangrane / Su Yu Hsin / Territorial Agency (John Palmesino & Ann-Sofi Rönnskog) / Yao Jui-Chung
Theater of Negotiations
Hsin-Hsing Chen / Wen Ling Hong / Paul Jobin / Yi-Ping Lin / Wenling Tu / Chia Ling Wu / Shashank Keshavmurthy