“Historical markers and tombstones
are really not all that different.”
Su Wong-Shen
Su Wong-Shen
Infused with a
bleak sense of humor the Taiwanese artist Su Wong-Shen paints scenes that comment upon the society
with in which he lives that betray an earlier infatuation with abstraction.
Whilst studying
at the Fine Art Department of Chinese Cultural University in the latter
half of the 1970’s a visiting American professor introduced Su to the hard edge
abstract and minimalist styles of painting. With further inspiration from the study of western abstract
artists it was a style Su worked to develop whilst ever mindful of the real
world.
When Taiwan’s
oppressive military rule came to an end in 1987 Su’s interest and consequent
depiction of the changing social order began to appear in his work.
As the Taiwanese
curator and art critic Chia-chi Wang states in his essay An Aloof and Melancholy
Eye -- The Art and Solicitudes of Su Wong-shen “Su himself has said he did not wish
to express his own individual critique of Taiwan’s political happenings in any
overly direct manner and thus chose to use the cats and dogs as a metaphor.”
It is a metaphor
that over the ensuing years has grown to include other members of the animal
kingdom.
As Su has
said “My use of cats and dogs to symbolize people was initially relatively
clear, later becoming just ‘animals’ and not specifically representing as cats
or dogs.”
Su’s
interest in abstraction lingers in his current works through his often adoption
of a birds eye point of view that does away with faraway
skies and horizons concentrating the view on the “land” below. Upon
which his actors interact in a social theatre of survival amongst the often
historical human landmarks that shape the stage for their performance.
As Su has observed “Both[historical markers and tombstones] are a kind of totem to a
seemingly bygone memory. The significance of these markers may be a kind of
gratitude and they may have a kind of mystical effect or perhaps provide a path
toward emotional reconciliation.”
Su’s current retrospective exhibition Animal Farm is
on show at Taiwan’s Taipei
Fine Arts Museum until the 14th of February 2016.
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