Born in Yilan, Taiwan in 1979, HUANG Zan-Lun has experienced several twists and turns in his artistic career. He has studied in Navigation Department at National Suao Marine and Fisheries Vocational High School, the Department of Applied Arts at Fu Hsing Kang College, NDU.ROC, the Department and Graduate Institute of Early Childhood Development and Education at National Hualien Teachers College, and the Department of Visual Communication Design at Jinwen University of Science and Technology. After completing his term of military service, he entered the Department of Fine Arts at National Taiwan University of Arts in 2006, where his artistic career officially began. Growing up in a fishing village, he had spent some year working on the sea before he stepped into a city life surrounded by digital technology. The previous experience has thus offered him better sensitivity to observe and to speculate about environmental and technological issues.
Huang is one of few artists who use sculptures to discuss the issue of technology. His artistic concern mostly focuses on the subtle relationship and development between new media and humanity. Series of his works adopt mechanical units to simulate the pulse of life in the creation of “cyborg” – a hybrid creature. The works mock human beings for projecting their desires onto other creatures with the help of technology. Huang’s works touch upon the ethics of technology as he combines images of two creatures to create an alien. The artist fully expresses his critical attitude toward the contradictory essence of such a hybrid. In his works, we see a creature, which is more than a robot, carrying its sadness to reflect the juxtaposition of our fear and desire. Meanwhile, the artist reveals his sensitive speculation on technology and humanity in the gaze of the works.
Anne is the animalized creature created by HUANG Zan-Lun. Unlike Cyborg in his early stage which combines human and machines, Anne is a hybrid of multiple creatures, including human body, deer’s antlers, horse’s mane, and turtle shell. She is breathing through the ecmo on its mouth, panting weakly. Anne is like a prophecy of the future generic engineering. The artist also puts antlers and turtle shell on her, symbolizing the precious Chinese medicine “Turtleand deer Immortals glue.” With all these elements, Anne should be a perfect and undefeatable creature, but ironically, she looks so fragile.
In the exhibition, Anne is like an object waiting to be examined. She is under the surveillance camera, waiting for the future of the unknown in her silence. Here, the artist compares Anne to an observer. She sees herself on the surveillance monitor, gazing at her own image as if she were an outsider to examine her situation. As the viewers around Anne, are we also looking into our own future?
The artist grew up in a time when Taiwan experienced a rapid development of high-tech industry, which soon became the trend of the age. Meanwhile, we started to welcome waves of digital revolutions in our daily life while new technology and 3C products kept replacing the existing ones. The change of the society influenced the young artists’ choice of media. At the same time, when humans were celebrating the coming of the new millennium, a new age of artificial intelligence and biotechnology arrived. Dolly the Sheep, the first mammal produced in the lab, was born, which fundamentally changed our perspective on technology and civilization.
The first exhibition of new media art/technological art was held in Taiwan in 2002. In 2006, we welcomed the first Digital Art Festival Taipei, followed by the establishment of Center for Art and Technology at Taipei National University of the Arts. Since then, “technology” has become a trendy medium to express and to reflect the spirit of time in the development of Taiwan’s contemporary art. It is not only an aesthetic symbol of a period of time, but also touches upon people’s imagination of a future society. Huang’s works were created in this trend. From the countryside in Yilan, the experience as a sailor, and the life in the city, his artistic practice always reaches a subtle balance of contradiction between Nature and technology no matter how the world confronts the impact of new technology and civilization. He evokes a deeper level of humanity to examine the technological age we live in. It is why we can always feel the warm touch of humanity in his works.
Chinese title: | 安妮 Anne |
English title: | Evolution-Anne |
Decade: | 2013 |
Medium / Classification: | Mixed Media |
Dimensions: | 150×90×90 cm |
Artist: | HUANG Zan-Lun |
Life-span: | 1979 - |
Collection Unit: | Courtesy of the artist |
Contact method for authorization: | HUANG Zan-Lun |
Related Exhibition: | "The Pioneers" of Taiwanese Artists, 1971-1980 |