Feng Mengbo, My Private Album, Edition Atelier Graz 1996
ARTISTS
Arahmaiani (Bandung/Bangkok), Nobuyoshi Araki (Tokyo), Duangrit Bunnag (Bangkok),
Cai Guo Qiang (Quanzhou/New York), Yung Ho Chang (Beijing), Chen Shaoxiong (Guangzhou),
Chen Zhen (Shanghai/Paris), Chi Ti-Nan (Taipei), Choi Jeong-Hwa (Seoul), Charles
Correa (Bombay), Heri Dono (Jogyakarta), Edge-Michael Chan/Gary Chang (Hong Kong),
Geng Jianyi (Hangzhou), Simryn Gill (Kuala Lumpur/Sydney), Dominique Gonzales-Foerster
(Kyoto/Paris), Hanayo (Tokyo), Harvard Project (Cambridge/Massachusetts), Itsuko
Hasegawa (Tokyo), David d¹Heilly (Tokyo), Herzog & De Meuron (Basel), Oscar Ho
(Hong Kong), Richard Ho (Singapore), Ho Siu Kee (Hong Kong), Tao Ho (Hong Kong),
Takashi Homma (Tokyo), Huang Chin-Ho (Taichung), Huang Yong Ping (Xiamen/Paris),
Arata Isozaki (Tokyo), Toyo Ito (Tokyo), Sumet Jumsai (Bangkok), Chitti Kasemkitvatana
(Bangkok), Kiyonori Kikutake (Tokyo), Jinai Kim (Seoul), Soo-Ja Kim (Seoul), Yun-Tae
Kim (Seoul), Takeshi Kitano (Tokyo), Karl-Heinz Klopf (Vienna), Aglaia Konrad
(Vienna/Brussels), Koo Jeong-A (Seoul/Paris), Rem Koolhaas (Rotterdam), Kisho
Kurokawa (Tokyo), Surasi Kusolwong (Bangkok), Lee Bul (Seoul), Liang Ju-Hui (Guangzhou),
Liew Kung Yu (Kuala Lumpur), William Lim associates (Singapore), Lin Yi Lin (Guangzhou),
Liu Thai Ker (Singapore), Greg Lynn (Hoboken/LA), Ken Lum (Vancouver), Fumihiko
Maki (Tokyo), Fiona Meadows/Frédéric Nantois (Paris), Sohn-Joo Minn (Seoul), Rudi
Molacek (Vienna), Mariko Mori (Tokyo/New York), Takashi Murakami (Tokyo), Matthew
Ngui (Singapore), Tsuyoshi Ozawa (Tokyo), Ellen Pau (Hong Kong), Navin Rawanchaikul
(Bangkok), Kazuo Sejima (Tokyo), Seung H-Sang (Seoul), Shen Yuan (Fuzhou/Paris),
Shi Yong (Shanghai), Judy Freya Sibayan (Manila), Marintan Sirait / Andar Manik
(Bandung), Yutaka Sone (Tokyo), Sarah Sze (New York), Aaron Tan (Hong Kong), Fiona
Tan (Jakarta/Amsterdam), Takahiro Tanaka (Tokyo), Tay Kheng Soon (Singapore),
Chandraguptha Tenuwara (Colombo), Rirkrit Tiravanija (Bangkok/New York), Tsang
Tsou-choi (Hong Kong), Wang Du (Guangzhou/Paris), Wang Jianwei (Beijing), Jun-Jieh
Wang (Taipei), Wong Hoy-Cheong (Kuala Lumpur), Wong Kar-Wai (Hong Kong), Wong
& Ouyang associates (Hong Kong), Xu Tan (Guangzhou), Riken Yamamoto (Tokyo), Miwa
Yanagi (Tokyo), Ken Yeang (Kuala Lumpur), Yin Xiuzhen (Beijing), Zhan Wang (Beijing),
Zhang Peili (Hangzhou), Zheng Guogu (Guangzhou), Zhou Tiehai (Shanghai), Zhu Jia
(Beijing)
"An increasing number of cities are on the move - everything is in a state of
perpetual change. Economic, social, political and cultural life develops at breakneck
speed. This kind of progress has produced new hybrid forms of modernity. Urban
diffusion and density, improvised cities, the mobile city, post-urban city, Glux
City, Sim City, Fragmented City and threatening "social decadence" that Itsuko
Hasegwa describes critically in the wake of Cardboard Constructions, that pile
up in the shade of skyscrapers. Rem Koolhaas states that cities are "non-stable
configurations". Post-urban cities are something hybrid and do not concern themselves
too much about questions regarding their own identity. This gives rise to "a new
aesthetic of the casual contrast of units that have nothing in common apart from
their own co-existence". Koolhaas in S, M, L, XL expresses his conviction that
if the centre no longer exists, then the suburb does not exist either, and consequently
everything becomes city and belongs to the city. He mentions a new pervasiveness
that includes landscape, park, industry, rust belt, parking lot, housing tract,
single family house, desert, airport, beach, river, sky, slope, even downtown
...
This topic constitutes the theme of the exhibition CITIES ON THE MOVE which Hou
Hanru and Hans-Ulrich Obrist have conceived for the Vienna Secession (November
1997), and whose key cities are: Bangkok, Guangzhou, Hanoi, Hong Kong, Jakarta,
Kuala Lumpur, Manila, Osaka, Beijing, Seoul, Shanghai, Shen Zhen, Singapore, Tokyo,
..." (Hans-Ulrich Obrist)
The urban explosion in Asia is generating a great number of new Global Cities.
These new global cities represent the erection of new economic, cultural and even
political powers which are bringing about a new world order and new visions of
our planet in the coming century. Apart from classical characteristics of global
cities, such as being active elements of the world market and communication, various
and multicultural urban culture,"internationalized" modes of life, inter-connectivity,
etc. these new, Non-Western global cities also have their own specific characteristics:
their own cultural traditions, historical backgrounds, which are mostly connected
with the Colonial past and neo-colonial present, and hence new claims for developments.
But, the most important is that, with their specific legacies, they become a new
and original spaces in which new visions and understandings of Modernity, and
new possibilities of "Utopian/dystopian" imaginations, can be elaborated and invented.
It is certainly one of the most decisive factors of the global mutation that we
are experiencing at the turn of the millenium. Several generations of artists,
architects, urban planners, film makers and intellectuals from Asia have been
contributing inventively to the formation of such new urban visions. They represent
a raising force in the restructuring of our global urban/cultural order. An exhibition
which presents such a new force in a Western context today, is not only necessary
but also essential since the East and West are approaching each other unprecedentedly
in the process of Globalisation. It is also particularly significant to celebrate
the Centenary of the Vienna Secession with such an event before touring to several
international institutions of contemporary art and architecture. (Hou Hanru)
PUBLICATION
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CITIES
ON THE MOVE
231 Seiten. 268 s/w-Fotos und -Grafiken
Text: Hou Hanru und Hans Ulrich Obrist
Secession 1997, ISBN 3-7757-0727-1
erschienen im Verlag Gerd Hatje
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Erhältlich im
Shop
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For further information and
photographic material please contact:
Tamara Schwarzmayr
Secession, Association of Visual Artists Vienna Secession
Friedrichstraße 12, 1010 Vienna
Tel: +43-1-5875307-21, Fax: +43-1-5875307-34
presse@secession.at