New Taipei City Art Museum Exhibition Audio Guide
Script of this episode// In the 1970s, traditional opera gradually declined due to urbanization, industrial growth, and the enforcement of the national mandarin language policy. During this period, the Dadaocheng Ling-An Society stood out. Founded in 1871, the Lin-An Society is Taipei’s oldest Beiguan amateur society. It has long participated in deity-welcoming ceremonies at the Xia Hai City God Temple and in local festivals, sustaining the zidixi tradition rooted in temple festival culture. At the end of 1975, Chiu Kun-liang, who was then teaching in the Department of Drama at Chinese Culture College, led his students to the Ling-An Society to learn Zidixi from folk masters. This was the first instance in Taiwan in which college students sought guidance from the Minjian sphere through an organized approach. The students’ focus went beyond operatic techniques—by engaging with stage movements, singing styles, theatrical makeup, and traditional percussion, they performed on open-air stages to personally re-understand and reconnect with the deep link between traditional opera and local society. After their first public appearance in 1977, this group of students began performing in various locations, including temple courtyards, neighborhood streets, harbors, and local festivals. Photographer Lin Bo-liang documented their journey starting in 1979, capturing everything from rehearsals and makeup applications to stage performances, and interactions with local audiences. Rather than adopting a purely observational approach, his camera serves as a partner to these young performers—witnessing their evolution from students to genuine performers and their humility in facing the scrutiny of traditional folk masters and local crowds. Apart from Lin Bo-liang’s photography, Han Sheng (the Chinese version of ECHO magazine) published a special feature on the Ling-An Society in 1976, offering a detailed documentation of this traditional culture of amateur musical societies. In 1977, Chang Chao-tang directed the documentary Archive / Ling-An Society, which captures invaluable footage of their public performance near Taipei’s Water Gate No. 9. The film preserves the unrestored quality of the original celluloid, with visible scratches, a reddish hue, and coarse grain—elements that enhance the viewing experience by reflecting the fluid and energetic outdoor theater live. This collection of photographs, films, and archival publications invites us to reflect on a significant cultural experiment from the 1970s, created by intellectual youth, documentary filmmakers, and folk artists. They went beyond mere documentation of a tradition; they immersed themselves in Minjian society, took part in it, and, through each rehearsal and performance, critically rethought their relationship to local culture while seeking and reshaping the concept of “the Minjian” in the contemporary world. 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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