New Taipei City Art Museum Exhibition Audio Guide
Script of this episode// Chang Chao-tang’s photography often features musicians, wanderers, and long-distance travelers. Their identities are not always clear, and they sometimes lack detailed backstories. Instead, they appear as transient silhouettes pausing in their journeys, enveloped in silence and mystery, inviting the viewer’s imagination to fill the gaps. In this vitrine, the first exhibit is a photograph by Werner Bischof, included in the 1977 Life Notes. It depicts a young flute player approaching a village in the Andes. This image was later curated by Chang Chao-tang, copied freehand by Shi Song’s mother, and ultimately transformed into a woodblock print by Shi Song. Over time, the image moved beyond its original context, evolving into a cross-media, ever-changing cultural symbol. In this context, “nostalgia” extends beyond a simple longing for the homeland; it becomes an emotion repeatedly evoked through shifting imagery, text, and memories. This transformation continues in a seaside group photograph featured in the 1978 edition of Life Notes. Discovered in sculptor Ju Ming’s old photo albums, the photograph’s original creator, subjects, and location remained entirely unknown. Chang contrasted this anonymous image from Minjian society with the classic Taiwanese song “Song of Tobacco and Alcohol”, imbuing the photo with the drifting mood of a cinematic still. Years later, the public learned that the figures in the photo were friends from a glove puppetry troupe, taken on the coast of Tongxiao, Miaoli. Because their identities were once unknown, the photo evoked strong feelings of wandering, nostalgia, and life’s journey. It has inspired Shi Song’s woodblock print Winter Seashore, Lin Hwai-min’s dance piece My Nostalgia, My Songs, and the theatrical production *Pirated Version: My Nostalgia, My Songs *by Wang Mo-lin and Wang Jun-jieh — all of which continue to be reinterpreted across diverse art forms. Since the 1970s, “returning to the native soil” has been a crucial topic in Taiwanese cultural discussions. Nevertheless, these works remind us that “homeland” is not always a physical location one can visit. Rather, it is an emotional realm that is constantly redefined through a mix of images, sounds, and memories. Consequently, this vitrine does not merely display the pursuit of an “origin.” Instead, it shows how a single photograph can be circulated, appropriated, transformed, and reinterpreted by various creators, constantly generating new cultural significance. It is through this ongoing process of change that the “Minjian” is continuously reimagined. Minjian / Photography: Documentary Vision and Its Realist Inflection 2026.07.18-11.15 |Curator|CHANG Shih-lun |Artists|MATSUYAMA Kenzo, CHANG Tsai, HUANG Tse-hsiu, HUANG Yung-sung, YAO Meng-chia, CHANG Chao-tang, LIANG Cheng-chu, LIN Bo-liang |More Information|https://ntcart.museum/exhibition_content.aspx?id=H2606003 [https://ntcart.museum/exhibition_content.aspx?id=H2606003]
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