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관리자 2019-09-22 22:41
Tales from the Wind, Litanies of the Sea, 2019, Bamboo, ribbon, wind harp, Dimensions variable
Taitung Dawn Artist Village & Toko Studio
If There is an island on the Beach
❑ artist bio
Alfredo & Isabel Aquilizan is a husband and wife artistic team born in the Philippines respectfully, lives and works both in Manila and Brisbane. Alfredo Aquilizan(b. 1962) has doctorate degree in Visual Arts from Queensland College of Art, Griffith University; MA in Fine Arts from Anglia Polytechnic University Norwich School of Art and Design Norwich, UK; and BA in Fine Arts from the Philippine Women’s University College of Music and Fine Arts Manila, Philippines. Isabel Aquilizan(b. 1965) studied Production Art at Assumption College Makati City, Philippines. In their art the duo incorporates various genres including media, site-specific installation, public art, performance, community art, collective art, etc. They have participated in prestigious exhibitions all over the world including The 1st Thailand Biennale (2018), Gangwon International Biennale, South Korea (2018), THE 6th Asia Pacific Triennial of Contemporary Art, Australia (2009), The 2nd Singapore Biennale (2008), The 15th Biennale of Sydney (2006), Gwangju Biennale, South Korea (2004), The 50TH Venice Biennial (2003), etc.
❑ introduction
Alfredo & Isabel Aquilizan moved to Australia with their five children in 2006. Since then, the couple have shown large-scale installations with subjects that close to their lives such as house, family, sense of affiliation, migration, absence, change, accumulated memories. They communicate with public complex emotions caused by the social changes and contingent confusions while focusing on to generate shared experiences and organic memories though these interactions. In so doing, the material they use, which are found from their surroundings such as corrugated cardboard, clothes, shoes, and blankets, metaphorically manifests the lives as individual and in community.
Project Another Country, for an instance, is a project they have organized since the year 2006 in which they collect package boxes that you often see in stores to make hundreds of small paper houses and then to link each other to form huge installations such as ship. The Aquilizans work together with many art institutions in cities for collaborative projects with local communities during which participants share personal stories within given themes in order to generate new experiences. Another example, Wings (2009) is consisted of three pairs of wings made out of hundreds of flip-flops collected from prisoners in one of Singapore penitentiaries, a confined community from which one can never be free from even with all the luck in the world.
The installation they will present in this year’s Sea Art Festival, Tales from the Wind, Litanies of the Sea (2019), is composed of over 400 wind harps made of bamboos and 1100 white ribbons fixed on the 1500 of 4.5 meters high bamboo poles. This work is based on their earlier work entitled, Daing (2003) which was presented with flip-flops and wind harps on bamboo poles at a fishing village in the Philippines. “Daing” is the word that has multiple meanings of ‘mourning,’ ‘elegy,’ and ‘salted fish’ in Tagalog. The Aquilizans selected white ribbon that symbolizes death in Korea and juxtaposed them to wind harps that make an unique sound against wind passing by in order to deliver nature’s tragic message with audio-visual devise amplifying its effect.