Big Picture: The Sound of Ideology with Taiwanese Artist Ting-Jung Chen
VIEW EVENT DETAILSSiren Songs, Propaganda Machines, and Historical Transposing

"If She Is Not Sitting In the Room", multiple channels sound installation, 2021 ("Harmonielehrer. Ting-Jung Chen's Solo Exhibition" Exhibition view in TheCube Project Space, 2021). Photo: ANPIS_FOTO. Courtesy of the artist.
The works of Taiwanese artist Ting-Jung Chen revolve around the relation between sound and control. She samples and rearranges the recordings of victory speeches from World War II into new sound pieces; she alters songs in composition and text that were used as sonic warfare by the Taiwanese against China during the 1970s-1990s and builds large sound installations to play them on; and she re-orchestrates political songs that reflect on collective memory and identity.
The philosopher turned artist was born in Taipei in the 1980s and now works and lives in Taipei and Vienna. Ting-Jung Chen’s art practice deals with question of language and historiography, often with a performative approach. Her work explores sound, its tonality, and how it affects people and their (political) emotions. By reproducing acoustics and artifacts of the culture industry she creates re-telling stories and experiences that speak of the evocative power of sound in the socio-political tension between groups led by different ideologies.
The conversation will be moderated by Dr. Simona Grano, Senior Fellow on Taiwan at the Asia Society Policy Institute's Center for China Analysis and inaugural TOY Senior Fellow at Asia Society Switzerland.
Join us for a conversation with Ting-Jung Chen on her work and experience fragments of her sound pieces.

Ting-Jung Chen is currently an Award Fellow with the DAAD Artists-in-Berlin Program. She obtained the Kunsthalle Wien Prize 2018, and she is the recipient of the MAK-Schindlers-Scholarship 2019 from MAK Museum Vienna. She has been awarded various prizes, scholarships and fellowships, including the 2022 Promotion Award of Fine Arts, City of Vienna, Austria; Visual Arts Grant 2020 from Federal Chancellery of Austria; the Visual Arts Grant 2020 from Taiwan National Culture and Arts Foundation; the “MIT” Fellowship 2020 from the Ministry of Culture of Taiwan; the Koganecho residency fellowship 2017; the Judges Award of the Taipei Arts Awards 2015; the Deutschlandstipendium 2015; the Karl H. Ditz Scholarship 2014, and several other fellowships and project funding fellowships. Her works have been shown in numerous venues internationally, including Belvedere 21erHaus, Vienna, Kunsthalle Wien, Kunsthaus Hamburg, National Taiwan Museum of Fine Arts, Taipei Fine Art Museum, Parallel Vienna, Koganecho Bazaar 2017, Yokohama, Japan, MAK Center for Art and Architecture, Los Angeles, and 18 Street Art Center, Santa Monica, U.S. among many others.

Dr. Simona Grano is Senior Fellow on Taiwan at the Asia Society Policy Institute's Center for China Analysis and the inaugural TOY Senior Fellow at Asia Society Switzerland, as well as an Associate Professor at the University of Zurich, with a focus on Chinese and Taiwanese studies. She has held research positions and taught China Studies and Taiwan Studies at Ca' Foscari University of Venice in Italy, at the University of Zurich in Switzerland and at National Cheng'chi University in Taiwan. She is a research fellow of the European Research Center on Contemporary Taiwan (ERCCT) in Tübingen, Germany, and a research associate of SOAS, London. She regularly contributes to Swiss and global media through articles, commentaries and interviews and is often consulted by various Swiss governmental bodies regarding the situation between China and Taiwan and Switzerland's strategic options. She is the author of Environmental Governance in Taiwan: a new generation of activists and stakeholders, published in 2015 by Routledge. Her articles have appeared in the Journal of Civil Society, Journal of Current Chinese Affairs, China Information, Asiatische Studien, Taiwan in Comparative Perspective, Orizzonte Cina and International Journal of Taiwan Studies.
About Big Picture
Big Picture is a public event series where we celebrate art in all its forms and shapes: Be it food, movies, museums, or literature. We invite artists, curators, and experts to talk about their practices and how these can help shed light on the world we live in. These talks are designed to further the dialogue and exchange across disciplines and regions and to travel beyond the events.
Partners
The Big Picture event series is made possible with the support of Bergos and hosted in cooperation with Karl der Grosse.


This Big Picture event is hosted in cooperation with sinokultur.
