Chen’s work focuses on the idea of the body as a social construct subject to power relations, a theme which runs from his early performance as resistance against the authoritarian regime in Taiwan, through digitally manipulated photographs of torture and war, to recent films about the vacuum left behind for workers and the built environment when capital moves elsewhere.
Using photography and film, Chen (b.1960, Taoyuan, Taiwan) creates a space in which standard narratives are deconstructed and the subjectivity of the viewed can be reestablished. In the 1990s, Chen adapted a series of historic photographs of torture and war by digitally replacing the victims, the torturers and the onlookers in the scenes with images of himself. Rather than using them to comment on specific historical events, the artist calls these images ‘echoes’ that address the issues of the coloniser and the colonised, the photographer and the photographed, gaze and power, discipline and body, self and other, and reality and illusion.
Factory (2003) and Bade Area (2005) are documentaries of non-events in northern Taiwan, where textile factories and workers have been abandoned after capital shifted to China and other low-cost regions. Like the photographs, these slow, silent films portray the cruelty and void imposed on the workers and their architectural habitats; they suggest the aftermath of a long-drawn-out war.
Chen Chieh-jen’s films can be deceptively beautiful. He creates striking sequences of near abstract black and white images, but at the same time his works are moving depictions of the lives of real people: he uses the local and the individual to show us the often harsh realities of global economics. Chen’s film for International 06 looked back to the dock-workers’ strike of the 1990’s, sparked when five hundred Liverpool dockers were fired for refusing to cross a picket line. Entitled, The Route 2006, the film followed the fortunes of one ship and its cargo, revealing in the process a truly global story of workers’ solidarity that begins in Liverpool’s docks and ends all the way back in the artist’s homeland, Taiwan.
The Route, 2006
DVD projection, black and white
Single channel video and sound installation
Commissioned by Liverpool Biennial 2006
Exhibited at The Tate Liverpool
Taipei Representative Office in the U.K.
Council for Cultural Affairs, Taiwan
Liverpool Biennial
55 New Bird Street
Liverpool L1 0BW
Liverpool Biennial is funded by
Founding Supporter
James Moores