• Metal Odyssey French artist Sophie Calle once said: 'Art is a way of maintaining distance. The pathological or therapeutic aspects...

    Metal Odyssey

     
    French artist Sophie Calle once said: "Art is a way of maintaining distance. The pathological or therapeutic aspects are present, but they are merely catalysts."[6] The exhibition, as a meeting ground for "life stories" and "audiences," is titled "Metal Odyssey." It combines the imagery of travel—suitcases and the experiences of patients (cases)—through the medical records of the artists and their family members. It delves into the traces of memories in life and reshapes our understanding of intimate familial relationships. The "metal" in the theme symbolizes medical instruments related to illness, and as the authority of these devices grows[7], the artwork delves deeper into the evolving relationship between the artist and caregiving. It emphasizes the intermediary role of metal instruments in medical cases while subtly hinting at the creative spark between the artist and curator, much like the traces left by a journey.
     
    This exhibition extends the concept of the classic work Appointment with Sigmund Freud by Sophie Calle, where the author is like a guest invited into Freud's home. This book provides a fresh inspiration for our exhibition—introducing the concept of "photographic text" and how to create a sense of "anticipation" for the audience. How do the interwoven elements of the exhibition, archives, diaries, and photographs shape the relationship between real space and memory?[8] Metal Odyssey creates an atmosphere of welcoming visitors through its display of stories, symbolizing the appointment and anticipation between us and the audience. We sincerely invite them to step into this dialogue about creation, caregiving, and intimacy.
     
    Chia-Shin Yang's works, rooted in the concept of "re-covery," analyze and replicate her private medical history,and personal experiences of illness, from childhood to the present. In the installation 08773545, she integrates her mother's handwritten notes, sketch writing, and daily images. By reconstructing medical records in a "full-screen" format that challenges linear browsing, she transforms the archives into an immersive space for viewers to navigate. In addition, through a sound installation of mother-daughter dialogues that confront the difficulty of directly facing past experiences—both physically and mentally—alongside family images that weave together the realities of caregiving relationships, Yang unveils fragments of family dynamics and reflects on the entanglement of memory, illness, and care.
     
    Jess Ching-Wa Lau's art pieces, viewed through her own lens, document her father's journey from the discovery of cataracts to his post-surgery recovery. As her father's vision becomes increasingly blurred, the artist attempts to capture and illustrate the "blind field" between herself and her father, who suffers from an eye disease, through dynamic imagery.[9] Her still images, titled Wildlands Behind, inspired by observations of her father's treatment process, prompt a re-examination of both her own and her father's physicality. The work captures partial shots of their bodies, offering an organic reassembly of memories. In her moving image work, The Star Within Your Sun, Jess Ching-Wa Lau explores the concept that "humans cannot look directly at the sun." She replaces the artist's eyes with a lens made in the 1970s to capture this "moving landscape." Simultaneously, both the body and the tools collectively shape our experience of the world, as our organs, like the surrounding equipment, are constantly engaged in digesting, breathing, seeing, and hearing, echoing Heidegger's perspective in Being and Time.[10]
     
    This exhibition revisits and reinterprets medical records, presenting a "documentary gesture" to portray the process of recovery as observed by others or as a personal journey from illness to healing. It draws an analogy to the "Odyssey" from Homer's epic, representing a challenging, lengthy, and perilous journey while also representing return, wisdom, courage, and resilience. The artworks further highlight the metallic sheen that emerges from the intersection of art and reality.
     

     

    [6] One of Sophie Calle's remarkable quotes. Born in Paris, France, Sophie Calle is an artist, photographer, and writer.
    [7] Aho, J., & Aho, K. (2009). Body Matters: A Phenomenology of Sickness, Disease, and Illness. Lexington Books, p.147.
    [8] Appointment with Sigmund Freud is a work presented in book form. In the preface, the author, Sophie Calle, reflects on the origin of this "appointment." In February 1998, Calle was invited to hold an exhibition at Sigmund Freud's former residence. She imagined a wedding dress draped over Freud's consultation couch, and this evocative image became the catalyst for the exhibition. The work is a unique dialogue between thoughts and objects. Calle juxtaposes her personal reflections and belongings with items from Freud's private collection, which are still preserved in his former home today.
    [8] Pinney, Christopher. "Bruises and Blushes: Photography 'Beyond' Anthropology." In Documentary Across Disciplines, p.21.
    [10] Martin Heidegger emphasizes that the body is not merely a functional system in the biological sense, but is at the core of how we "exist" and "act" in the world. The body and tools together constitute our experience of the world.
  • ARTIST: Jess Ching-Wa LAU Jess Ching-Wa LAU (b.1991) is a Hong Kong-born artist who graduated with a BA (Honours) in...

    ARTIST: Jess Ching-Wa LAU

     

    Jess Ching-Wa LAU (b.1991) is a Hong Kong-born artist who graduated with a BA (Honours) in Creative Media from City University of Hong Kong in 2014. Her work delves into themes such as narrative fragments, body memory, and the passage of time, emphasizing iterative manual processes and the layering of experience.
     
    Working across diverse media—including video, animation, and installation—Jess explores the unique characteristics and malleability of each medium. Her practice often blurs the boundaries between fiction and reality.
     
    Her iconic works are created through the accumulation of labour and time. The material is constantly reorganized, shaped, and dismantled in the world of video, connecting and extending with the memory and imagination of the city as well as the individual self. At the same time, her works aim to break the cold impression of media art, to portray the temperature of people, the traces left by her body, and to emphasize the process of creation and imaging.
     
    Her works have been exhibited and screened internationally such as Ars Electronica (Austria), Animatou - International Animation Film Festival (Switzerland), Image Forum Festival (Japan), Two Temple Place (London), Ben Brown Gallery (Hong Kong), IFVA Media Art Festival (Hong Kong), Tai Kwun Contemporary (Hong Kong), and West Kowloon FreeSpace (Hong Kong). She was selected for the Tai Kwun Contemporary Artists' Studio Residency in 2020.
  • ARTIST: Chia-Shin YANG Chia-Shin Yang, born in Tainan in 1999. She currently lives and works in Taipei. Her subjectivity to...

    ARTIST: Chia-Shin YANG

     

    Chia-Shin Yang, born in Tainan in 1999. She currently lives and works in Taipei.
     
    Her subjectivity to experiences of illness and trauma is central to her artwork, which extends through a range of artistic media, including photography, installations, artist books, and other mixed media. Her works revolve around concepts of imprints and pain to explore the interplay between the body, visual experiences, materials, objects, and space. She reflects on emotional narratives, perceptions, corporeality, and the multi-sensory constructs shaped by illness and trauma. She courageously confronts the impact of illness on memory, along with its effects on physical and mental states.
     
    Her works have been exhibited at venues such as the Shanghai International Photography Festival, the Jimei × Arles International Photo Festival, the Tainan International Photography Festival, 1839 Contemporary Art Gallery, and Good Underground Art Space. She has received awards, including the Winner of Jimei × Arles Curatorial Award for Photography and Moving Image and shortlisted for the Jimei × Arles Dummy Book Awards at the Jimei × Arles International Photo Festival, the Photo Go Jury Award at the Tainan International Photography Festival, and the Excellence Award at the 1839 Photography Award, while also venturing into curating exhibitions and related art events.
  • CURATOR: Yi-Ning LIN (Michelle) Yi-Ning Lin, born in 1995 in Cambridge, UK, is based in Taipei and currently works at...

    CURATOR: Yi-Ning LIN (Michelle)

     
    Yi-Ning Lin, born in 1995 in Cambridge, UK, is based in Taipei and currently works at Jut Art Museum. She graduated from the Royal College of Art (RCA) in London with a Master’s degree in Curating Contemporary Art. She is deeply fascinated by the sounds that arise between roles in visual arts field and has a passion for observing and documenting the process of archiving experiences.
     
    Since the outbreak of the pandemic in 2020, she has curated and hosted the art podcast, titled 隨藝聊聊, which focuses on the current state of contemporary art and aims to capture the dialogues between artists and curators. She has gained extensive curatorial experience, covering areas such as exhibition planning, art criticism writing, exhibition tour guiding, and moderating discussions.
  • Curator: Chia-Shin YANG Chia-Shin Yang, born in Tainan in 1999. She currently lives and works in Taipei. Her subjectivity to...

    Curator: Chia-Shin YANG

     

    Chia-Shin Yang, born in Tainan in 1999. She currently lives and works in Taipei.
     
    Her subjectivity to experiences of illness and trauma is central to her artwork, which extends through a range of artistic media, including photography, installations, artist books, and other mixed media. Her works revolve around concepts of imprints and pain to explore the interplay between the body, visual experiences, materials, objects, and space. She reflects on emotional narratives, perceptions, corporeality, and the multi-sensory constructs shaped by illness and trauma. She courageously confronts the impact of illness on memory, along with its effects on physical and mental states.
     
    Her works have been exhibited at venues such as the Shanghai International Photography Festival, the Jimei × Arles International Photo Festival, the Tainan International Photography Festival, 1839 Contemporary Art Gallery, and Good Underground Art Space. She has received awards, including the Winner of Jimei × Arles Curatorial Award for Photography and Moving Image and shortlisted for the Jimei × Arles Dummy Book Awards at the Jimei × Arles International Photo Festival, the Photo Go Jury Award at the Tainan International Photography Festival, and the Excellence Award at the 1839 Photography Award, while also venturing into curating exhibitions and related art events.
  • Jess Ching-Wa LAU. Wildlands behind, 2024. Courtesy of the artist.
  • Jess Ching-Wa LAU. Wildlands behind, 2024. Courtesy of the artist.
  • Jess Ching-Wa LAU. Blended Visions, 2025. Courtesy of the artist.
  • Chia-Shin YANG. After The Conversation, 2025. Courtesy of the artist.
  • Chia-Shin YANG. Cardamon—Lake Journey, 2025. Courtesy of the artist.
  • Chia-Shin YANG. 08773545, 2025. Courtesy of the artist.