{"id":1624,"date":"2025-04-17T15:44:08","date_gmt":"2025-04-17T07:44:08","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/couldbe.tw\/clients\/HsiehChun-Te\/?page_id=1624"},"modified":"2025-11-17T22:58:56","modified_gmt":"2025-11-17T14:58:56","slug":"1969-river-bed","status":"publish","type":"page","link":"https:\/\/01x10.tw\/en\/1969-river-bed\/","title":{"rendered":"1969 \/ River Bed"},"content":{"rendered":"<!--themify_builder_content-->\n<div id=\"themify_builder_content-1624\" data-postid=\"1624\" class=\"themify_builder_content themify_builder_content-1624 themify_builder tf_clear\">\n                    <div  data-css_id=\"2abs904\" data-lazy=\"1\" class=\"module_row themify_builder_row fullwidth_row_container tb_2abs904 tb_first tf_w\">\n                        <div class=\"row_inner col_align_top tb_col_count_1 tf_box tf_rel\">\n                        <div  data-lazy=\"1\" class=\"module_column tb-column col-full tb_5lgf904 first\">\n                    <!-- module text -->\n<div  class=\"module module-text tb_fgmy904   \" data-lazy=\"1\">\n        <div  class=\"tb_text_wrap\">\n        <h2 class=\"p1\" style=\"text-align: center;\"><b>1969 \u00a0First Exhibition\u00a0<br><\/b><\/h2>    <\/div>\n<\/div>\n<!-- \/module text --><!-- module image pro -->\n<div  class=\"module module-pro-image tb_kpph193 filter-sepia effect-   tf_textc   entrance-effect-fadeIn wow\" data-tf-animation=\"fadeIn\" data-tf-animation_delay=\"1\" data-lazy=\"1\" data-entrance-effect=\"fadeIn\" data-exit-effect=\"fadeOut\" >\n\t\n    <div class=\"image-pro-wrap tf_rel tf_overflow tf_inline_b\">\n\t\t\t\t<div class=\"image-pro-flip-box-wrap tf_rel tf_w tf_overflow\">\n\t\t\t<div class=\"image-pro-flip-box tf_rel\">\n\n\t\t\t\t<img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/01x10.tw\/en\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/04\/14-\u797cNude1967_-1-1024x377-1200x420.jpg\" width=\"1200\" height=\"420\" class=\"wp-post-image wp-image-2868\" title=\"Nude 1967\" alt=\"Nude 1967\">\n\t\t\t\t\n\t\t\t<\/div>\n\t\t<\/div>\n\n    <\/div><!-- .image-pro-wrap -->\n\n\t\n\t\n\t<\/div><!-- \/module image pro -->        <\/div>\n                        <\/div>\n        <\/div>\n                        <div  data-lazy=\"1\" class=\"module_row themify_builder_row tb_6el8219 tf_w\">\n                        <div class=\"row_inner col_align_top tb_col_count_1 tf_box tf_rel\">\n                        <div  data-lazy=\"1\" class=\"module_column tb-column col-full tb_o8sx219 first\">\n                    <!-- module text -->\n<div  class=\"module module-text tb_a9j8219   \" data-lazy=\"1\">\n        <div  class=\"tb_text_wrap\">\n        <h3 class=\"p1\" style=\"text-align: left;\">The<b> condensed cinema of Hsieh Chun -Te<\/b><\/h3>\n<h5><strong>Dominique Pa\u00efni<br><\/strong><\/h5>\n<p><strong>(Critic, Professor at the Coll\u00e8ge de France, Former Director of the Cin\u00e9math\u00e8que Fran\u00e7aise, Former Deputy Director of the Centre Pompidou)<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>There is an expression in French, \u201cavoir de la suite dans les id\u00e9es,\u201d which is used to describe fidelity to one\u2019s ideas, a grounding in inaugural positions whose secret, personal motivations are then enriched, redeployed and redistributed along the way.<\/p>\n<p class=\"p3\">Ever since the 1960s Hsieh Chun-Te has been constructing his universe with unfailing assurance and constancy. Some of his key motifs originated in those years. Which is not to say that making the later work, including the most recent series, TENKY, has been calm, smooth sailing. Calm is not what distinguishes Hsieh\u2019s work from that of other contemporary artists. That said, \u201cluxury and pleasure,\u201d to take the two other terms from the famous title by Henri Matisse (<i>luxe, calme et volupt\u00e9<\/i>), have often featured in the work of this Taiwanese artist.<\/p>\n<p class=\"p3\">A superficial approach to this work might place it within an international tendency bringing together such artists as Gilbert and George, Jo\u00ebl-Peter Witkin, Pierre &amp; Gilles and David LaChapelle: in other words, a tendency that uses the photographic medium to create installations in which magnified or manipulated bodies are set in landscapes whose artificial lighting blurs the frontiers between the truth of nature and the artifice of the studio. But that would be to make a mistake about Hsieh\u2019s world and visual project. The retrospective approach recently initiated by the artist, allowing us to rediscover his works from the 1960s, gives a better idea of its specificity.<\/p>\n<p class=\"p3\">Right from the start, Hsieh\u2019s exceptional palette was black and white. What will impress us today, ideally, will not be just the infinite modulation of greys, something most twentieth-century masters of photography also aimed to achieve. No, Hsieh\u2019s obsessions lie elsewhere. They are embodied, more particularly, in the conflicts between <i>focus<\/i> and the diffraction of light, between the <i>sharp<\/i> and the blurred, between the clarity of the contours and the grain of the prints. The artist\u2019s other obsession lies in the conflict between forms of matter: marshes and epidermises, the accumulation of stones and capillary streams, the amorphous fragility of bodies and sculpted power of machines.<\/p>\n<p class=\"p3\">The images we are seeing today, most of them made in the late 1960s, could be interpreted as fragments of life captured in the urgency of encounters accompanied by the accidents due to precipitousness. In fact, these images already express Hsieh\u2019s simultaneously <i>symbolist<\/i> and abstract ambition.<\/p>\n<p class=\"p3\">Note: <i>symbolist<\/i> and not symbolic. There is a subtle distinction between the late nineteenth-century movement in painting and poetry, Symbolism, from the attempt to bestow a secondary meaning on the organisation of forms. There is, indeed, an undeniable symbolism in Hsieh\u2019s work, and especially recently. From Gustave Dor\u00e9 to Burne Jones, from Alfred Kubin to William Blake, we can discern the influence in the way the bodies are placed and in their confrontation with nature, all being part of a lyrical poetry which is ultimately concerned with conflict between tellurian and celestial forces. Most of all, though, these images which inaugurated Hsieh\u2019s work manifest a torment of abstraction.<\/p>\n<p class=\"p3\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"\" title=\"busgirl\" src=\"https:\/\/01x10.tw\/en\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/04\/busgirl.jpg\" alt=\"busgirl\" width=\"1460\" height=\"965\"><strong>[ Window ] 1968<\/strong><\/p>\n<p class=\"p3\">Image 01 is an extreme close-up on a body which fills almost all the space. As ever, there is a troubling eroticism in Hsieh\u2019s vision. Here, the framing suggests that the woman\u2019s dress is billowing up outside the frame. The close-up <i>depraves<\/i> the forms of the body and, upon close observation, there is utter uncertainty as to whether this figure is truly a human or just a doll, a living being or a lifeless dummy. Furthermore, the photo is backlit, and the bright light coming through the window \u201cburns\u201d the outlines of the exhibited body. Like a vampire, this mysterious silhouette seems to be eaten up by the light, disintegrating into an incandescent powder. That is why I feel I can speak here of Hsieh\u2019s \u201cabstract torment\u201d: the disappearance of figures, and a kind of terror of light, which are later developed to an apocalyptic degree in the <i>Tenky<\/i> series.<\/p>\n<p class=\"p3\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"\" title=\"Bed 1967\" src=\"https:\/\/01x10.tw\/en\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/04\/02\u7b2c\u4e00\u6b21\u500b\u5c55-\u5e8aBed1967-1.jpg\" alt=\"Bed 1967\" width=\"2000\" height=\"1384\"><strong>[ Bed ] 1968<\/strong><\/p>\n<p class=\"p3\">\u00a0uses and abuses light. No doubt it is the same window through which the fire passes here. But the interplay between appearance and disappearance in the previous image is acted out in this instance by the body reclining in the light, its nudity carefully hidden\/revealed by the artist. This body on which the black of an uncertain garment (rubber or leather?) opposes the white of the skin (the dazzling complexion of the buttocks), replays within the image the contrast between light and shadow which geometrically structures the space and references the medium itself.<\/p>\n<p class=\"p3\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"\" title=\"Endiess Night 1968\" src=\"https:\/\/01x10.tw\/en\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/04\/05\u7b2c\u4e00\u6b21\u500b\u5c55-\u591c\u672a\u592eEndiess-Night1968-1.jpg\" alt=\"Endiess Night 1968\" width=\"1500\" height=\"1010\"><strong>[\u00a0<\/strong><span style=\"font-weight: bold;\">Endless Night ]<\/span>\u00a0<span style=\"font-weight: bold;\">1968<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"p3\">Endless Night\u00a0is even more audacious. I mentioned earlier the coexistence of the human body and the machine. This image is one of the finest examples of this relationship which evokes a vision pertinent to both Taiwan and the big city of Taipei traversed by waves of motorbikes and scooters. Hsieh\u2019s image is interesting because the image it conveys is one of immobility. What we see is clearly a garage, with the machines at rest. It is their shine and shape that the artist wants to bring to our attention: hence the close-up on the right of the coachwork of one of these machines. In addition to this, however, a young girl who could otherwise be bestriding one of these engines is lying on the floor, between them. And this languorous abandon creates an equivalence between the mechanical and the human orders. &lt;<span style=\"font-weight: bold;\">On a waste ground<\/span>\u00a0&gt;\u00a0provides comparable reasons for surprise.<\/p>\n<p class=\"p3\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"\" title=\"Dutstretch into Sky 1968\" src=\"https:\/\/01x10.tw\/en\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/04\/16-\u7b2c\u4e00\u6b21\u651d\u5f71\u500b\u5c55-\u4f38\u5411\u5929\u7a7aDutstretch-into-Sk1968-1.jpg\" alt=\"Dutstretch into Sky 1968\" width=\"2067\" height=\"1391\"><strong>[ Dutstretch into Sky ]<\/strong><span style=\"font-weight: bold;\">\u00a01968<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"p3\">The French term <i>terrain vague<\/i> conveys its imprecise urban status and formlessness, its atmosphere of disquiet and expectancy \u2013\u00a0the remains of a car occupy the centre of the image. In the opening previously filled by the window of a door now reduced to paltry remains, a human body has been thrust\u00a0\u2013 all we can see are the legs sticking up skywards. What are we to think? Has the body fallen from a great height? Fallen from another vehicle, as suggested by the aeroplane taking off in the background? Hsieh\u2019s approach here is probably meant to be humorous. But it is no doubt more gravely pessimistic if we consider the equivalence between the piece of scrap and the equally ruined body sticking out of it, which appears to have met its fate at the same time as the vehicle in which it remains imprisoned. In addition, might this be a way for the artist to evoke the coming fate of those who are flying in that distant jet? Or is the artist making another suggestion? Are the modern city seen to the left of the image and the people who live there both headed for the fate of the enigmatic composition in the centre of the image? Or, finally, is the central motif the metaphor for this city in the background? Here the image\u2019s symbolist ambition cannot be separated from its symbolic intent. This picture comes some twenty years before the <i>Raw<\/i> series, and yet it could easily be part of it. Like that series, image 04 was made on the basis of a strategy of a twofold delay or wait This strategy lies at the heart of Hsieh\u2019s aesthetic, well beyond the RAW series, and still constitutes a founding principle in the recent works.<\/p>\n<p class=\"p3\">The first wait is the one that corresponds to the time of making the photo as such, the exposure time needed to imprint the scene on the film. This variable exposure time depends on the quality of light. But we may assume that the quality of the images and the final form they take on the gallery or museum walls will have been taken to justify the attentive adjustments made during the production process.<\/p>\n<p class=\"p3\">The second wait is for \u201cthe right moment\u201d to capture the scene. This is not the \u201cdecisive moment,\u201d to use the term from French humanist photography. It is a \u201cgood moment,\u201d a moment that has been waited and hoped for and, of course, prepared and programmed. In the photograph here, it was necessary that the aeroplane <b>cross the image for a fraction of a second<\/b>. The artist had to wait in order to capture this ensemble. The actor in the image, whose legs are all we see, had to wait in that uncomfortable and acrobatic position. Another thing the artist and actor had to wait for was for the sun to be so positioned that the shadow of the two legs was visible \u201cin the right place.\u201d We know that Hsieh does not manipulate his images. He stages them, composes them like a painter, but he does <i>rehearse<\/i> them, and does not always succeed. He makes them subtly, like a film director. And although that body \u201cthrown on the scrap heap\u201d signifies an undeniable pessimism and a despair that bodes only ill for the future of humanity, the very making of this image, on the contrary, betrays a paradoxical optimism as to the possibility of its success. The artist\u2019s attentive patience has allowed a successful balance between objects placed seemingly by chance in an unlikely place, bodies that <i>pose<\/i>, and a fleeting event. The image is thus complex beyond its immediate, burlesque effect of surprise. This is a complexity of both production and conception.<\/p>\n<p class=\"p3\">Among the images from the past, two textural pieces stand out.<\/p>\n<p class=\"p3\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"\" title=\"Swamp 1968\" src=\"https:\/\/01x10.tw\/en\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/04\/1969-w1.jpg\" alt=\"Swamp 1968\" width=\"1200\" height=\"791\"><strong>[ Swamp ] 1968\u00a0<\/strong><\/p>\n<p class=\"p3\">Represents a kind of swamp or, more exactly, a landscape of dunes covered with the kind of vegetation that grows on river estuaries. The solar star is still there and it consumes part of the horizon. A first third of the image is darkened by the plants that grow in floodable areas. Then, in the middle plane, sandy ground that is marbled or flecked like a carpet on which walks a figure of whom we see only the immaculately white back, and whose hair seems to merge with the foliage on the ground. This unexpected metamorphosis resulting from the decapitation of the figure moving towards the centre of the image bestows a strange status on the body, as un unidentified object which reveals, by contagion, the general tendency of the representation of landscape towards abstraction. There is nothing \u201cdocumentary\u201d about Hsieh\u2019s vision. Like the vanity that Blaise Pascale condemned in painting, one could justifiably designate comparable consequences in Hsieh\u2019s photographic tableaus. But the word vanity could also be used with another meaning, again taken from the field of painting: Hsieh Chun-Te\u2019s photographic tableaus encourage us to meditate on the instability of signs and forms that specify humanity. The Taiwanese artist, eyewitness on an island that for many years has felt an anxious political precariousness in the face of the immense nearby land from which it has separated, and from which it protects itself, has real legitimacy when it comes to expressing the ephemeral fate of all humanity, and he does so with genuine metaphysical ambition.<\/p>    <\/div>\n<\/div>\n<!-- \/module text --><!-- module image -->\n<div  class=\"module module-image tb_mtee458 image-center   tf_mw\" data-lazy=\"1\">\n        <div class=\"image-wrap tf_rel tf_mw\">\n            <img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/01x10.tw\/en\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/10\/1969-5-688x1024-600x893.jpg\" width=\"600\" height=\"893\" class=\"wp-post-image wp-image-6514\" title=\"River Bed 1968\" alt=\"River Bed 1968\" srcset=\"https:\/\/01x10.tw\/en\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/10\/1969-5-688x1024-600x893.jpg 600w, https:\/\/01x10.tw\/en\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/10\/1969-5-269x400.jpg 269w, https:\/\/01x10.tw\/en\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/10\/1969-5-688x1024.jpg 688w, https:\/\/01x10.tw\/en\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/10\/1969-5-768x1144.jpg 768w, https:\/\/01x10.tw\/en\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/10\/1969-5-1031x1536.jpg 1031w, https:\/\/01x10.tw\/en\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/10\/1969-5.jpg 1104w\" sizes=\"auto, (max-width: 600px) 100vw, 600px\" \/>    \n        <\/div>\n    <!-- \/image-wrap -->\n    \n        <\/div>\n<!-- \/module image --><!-- module text -->\n<div  class=\"module module-text tb_6oqn111   \" data-lazy=\"1\">\n        <div  class=\"tb_text_wrap\">\n        <p class=\"p3\"><strong>[ River Bed ] 1968<\/strong><\/p>\n<p class=\"p3\">Bed 1968\u00a0is even more impressive in terms of the clash of materials. The chaos of stones is represented in such a way as to seem without limits, extending beyond the frame, in an all-over approach which creates a tellurian darkness in the image. At the top of one of the biggest rocks is a face extended by slender shoulders. Reminiscent of M\u00e9lisande\u2019s fountain-like locks, the hair comes down to the lower edge of the image. The picture could be seen as a reverse version of Botticelli\u2019s <i>Birth of Venus<\/i>. The whiteness of the epidermis, the frozen, gaping eyes, the neglected hair, without a trace of wind, all suggest death rather than birth, doubt about the endurance of the human rather than reborn confidence.<\/p>\n<p class=\"p3\">But the disquiet exuded by this image, with its admirable movement of lines and modulated greys comparable to the drawings and washes of ancient China, is counterbalanced by the formal boldness and, once again, the message. This image may trouble and frighten because of the ghostly appearance that has neither consistency nor volume. Nevertheless, it is the brightness of this face which engenders an undeniably hypnotic effect on the beholder.<\/p>\n<p class=\"p3\">I have no hesitation in arguing that this work by Hsieh Chun-Te is one of his most disturbing icons, one that I would link and at the same time contrast with the incredible, absolutely antagonistic\u00a0<img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"\" title=\"Ximenting 1968\" src=\"https:\/\/01x10.tw\/en\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/04\/1969-w2.jpg\" alt=\"Ximenting 1968\" width=\"1200\" height=\"791\"><strong>[ Ximending ] 1969<\/strong><\/p>\n<p class=\"p3\">Just as structured as the preceding images, structured in two parts separated by the zigzag of the parapet of a bridge, a female form melts into the movement of the light. The distant city, carried away in the narcissistic brightness of the lights of consumption, seems to threaten to swallow up this moving body in order to escape hell. It irresistibly reminds me of the <i>Tenky<\/i> series in which flaming nature threatens an Eve who has been expelled from a scrubby, stony paradise. It is likely that the artist\u2019s return to what could be considered \u201cyouthful works\u201d has revealed or even confirmed that his whole body of work is marked by the fundamental threat of the destruction of life by combustion. And the use of colour in the recent works has not diminished the apocalyptic torment of an artist from whom the disasters of progress and indifference to the natural fate of the world are to a large extent what drives his passion in composing images. Might we posit that colour serves this incendiary terror even more effectively?<\/p>\n<p class=\"p3\">To conclude this look back over works that are nearly half a century old, I would like to emphasise the remarkable constancy of Hsieh\u2019s method. Well before artist\u2019s photography became dominant on museum and gallery walls, I note with great surprise that Hsieh was already conceiving of the photographic act as essentially an act of staging.<\/p>\n<p class=\"p3\">But then, should we really consider this work as belonging to the trend of artist\u2019s photography? No doubt we need to find another term than the French <i>photographie plasticienne<\/i>, one that, in avoiding reference to the <i>tableau vivant<\/i>, would designate an undertaking somewhere between photography and cinema. It is not a matter of comparing results. Hsieh\u2019s large-scale photographic compositions make no attempt to hide their immobile performance and their dynamic disquiet. They are far from the world of cinema. However, a few images might bring back memories of the films of Nagisa Oshima, for example, or, to take a less \u201cclassical\u201d filmmaker, Fruit Chan.<\/p>\n<p class=\"p3\">The point here is similarity of <i>mise-en-sc\u00e8ne<\/i>. Each of Hsieh\u2019s photographs \u2013 and this is a method that he began to apply as early as the 1960s \u2013 is the final step in a slow process and a long preparation that comprises finding locations, rehearsing with the \u201cactors,\u201d making anticipatory sketches, designing special costumes and many other preparatory actions that will obtain what one could think of as a <i>film condensed<\/i> into a single photograph, or the equivalent of a single frame \u2013 but with nothing before or after. What distinguishes Hsieh\u2019s highly constructed images from the images of other contemporary artists is the multiplicity of visual approaches within each image. These destabilise the representation and express the complexity of its making. I am referring here, among many other aspects, to the oppositions in the textures of the image.<\/p>\n<p class=\"p3\">Looking back today, I can think of only one artist working in the medium of photography who combines documentary ambition with poetic lyricism: Jeff Wall. Notwithstanding the considerable distance between them, a distance that is more than just the geographical distance between Vancouver and Taipei, these two artists accord an importance to their photographic staging proportionate to the weight of contemporary issues, and do so at a time when nothing is easier than making images. But <i>what<\/i> images? Of course, many artists take time in their studio to painstakingly build up the compositions in their photos. But in most cases, sadly, the result is just a kitsch backdrop. No doubt, then, it is long before the shot can be taken that an artist like Hsieh, almost forgetting the decisive moment of shutter release, <i>reflects on<\/i> the world\u2019s besetting ills.<\/p>    <\/div>\n<\/div>\n<!-- \/module text -->        <\/div>\n                        <\/div>\n        <\/div>\n                        <div  data-lazy=\"1\" class=\"module_row themify_builder_row tb_bna9980 tf_w\">\n                        <div class=\"row_inner col_align_top tb_col_count_1 tf_box tf_rel\">\n                        <div  data-lazy=\"1\" class=\"module_column tb-column col-full tb_tloi090 first\">\n                    <!-- module text -->\n<div  class=\"module module-text tb_vz7h060   \" data-lazy=\"1\">\n        <div  class=\"tb_text_wrap\">\n        <h3 style=\"text-align: center;\">Gallery<\/h3>    <\/div>\n<\/div>\n<!-- \/module text -->        <\/div>\n                        <\/div>\n        <\/div>\n                        <div  data-lazy=\"1\" class=\"module_row themify_builder_row tb_z1sp63 tf_w\">\n                        <div class=\"row_inner col_align_top tb_col_count_1 tf_box tf_rel\">\n                        <div  data-lazy=\"1\" class=\"module_column tb-column col-full tb_irdd63 first\">\n                    <!-- module gallery -->\n<div  class=\"module gallery module-gallery tb_nvf663 layout-grid  \" data-lazy=\"1\">\n    <div class=\"module-gallery-grid\" style=\"--gald:5;--galt:5;--galm:5\">\n            <dl class=\"gallery-item\">\n            <dt class=\"gallery-icon\">\n            <a data-title=\"\" title=\"\" href=\"https:\/\/01x10.tw\/en\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/10\/1969-w8.jpg\" data-rel=\"tb_nvf663\" class=\"themify_lightbox\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/01x10.tw\/en\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/10\/1969-w8-1024x675-300x225.jpg\" width=\"300\" height=\"225\" class=\"wp-post-image wp-image-6515\" title=\"Window 1968\" alt=\"Window 1968\"><\/a>            <\/dt>\n                    <\/dl>\n            <dl class=\"gallery-item\">\n            <dt class=\"gallery-icon\">\n            <a data-title=\"\" title=\"\" href=\"https:\/\/01x10.tw\/en\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/10\/1969-w2.jpg\" data-rel=\"tb_nvf663\" class=\"themify_lightbox\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/01x10.tw\/en\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/10\/1969-w2-1024x675-300x225.jpg\" width=\"300\" height=\"225\" class=\"wp-post-image wp-image-6519\" title=\"Ximending 1969\" alt=\"Ximending 1969\"><\/a>            <\/dt>\n                    <\/dl>\n            <dl class=\"gallery-item\">\n            <dt class=\"gallery-icon\">\n            <a data-title=\"\" title=\"\" href=\"https:\/\/01x10.tw\/en\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/10\/1969-w1.jpg\" data-rel=\"tb_nvf663\" class=\"themify_lightbox\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/01x10.tw\/en\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/10\/1969-w1-1024x675-300x225.jpg\" width=\"300\" height=\"225\" class=\"wp-post-image wp-image-6517\" title=\"Swamp  1968\" alt=\"Swamp  1968\"><\/a>            <\/dt>\n                    <\/dl>\n            <dl class=\"gallery-item\">\n            <dt class=\"gallery-icon\">\n            <a data-title=\"\" title=\"13-\u62cb\u68c4Discard1969\" href=\"https:\/\/01x10.tw\/en\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/04\/13-\u62cb\u68c4Discard1969-1.jpg\" data-rel=\"tb_nvf663\" class=\"themify_lightbox\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/01x10.tw\/en\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/04\/13-\u62cb\u68c4Discard1969-1-1024x675-300x225.jpg\" width=\"300\" height=\"225\" class=\"wp-post-image wp-image-2867\" title=\"Discard 1969\" alt=\"Discard 1969\"><\/a>            <\/dt>\n                    <\/dl>\n            <dl class=\"gallery-item\">\n            <dt class=\"gallery-icon\">\n            <a data-title=\"\" title=\"12- \u9ed1\u5098Black Umbrella1968_\" href=\"https:\/\/01x10.tw\/en\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/04\/12-\u9ed1\u5098Black-Umbrella1968_-1.jpg\" data-rel=\"tb_nvf663\" class=\"themify_lightbox\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/01x10.tw\/en\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/04\/12-\u9ed1\u5098Black-Umbrella1968_-1-1024x702-300x225.jpg\" width=\"300\" height=\"225\" class=\"wp-post-image wp-image-2866\" title=\"Black Umbrella 1968\" alt=\"Black Umbrella 1968\"><\/a>            <\/dt>\n                    <\/dl>\n            <dl class=\"gallery-item\">\n            <dt class=\"gallery-icon\">\n            <a data-title=\"\" title=\"08-\u5929\u6a4bFootbridge1968\" href=\"https:\/\/01x10.tw\/en\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/04\/08-\u5929\u6a4bFootbridge1968-1.jpg\" data-rel=\"tb_nvf663\" class=\"themify_lightbox\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/01x10.tw\/en\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/04\/08-\u5929\u6a4bFootbridge1968-1-675x1024-300x225.jpg\" width=\"300\" height=\"225\" class=\"wp-post-image wp-image-2865\" title=\"Footbridge 1968\" alt=\"Footbridge 1968\"><\/a>            <\/dt>\n                    <\/dl>\n            <dl class=\"gallery-item\">\n            <dt class=\"gallery-icon\">\n            <a data-title=\"\" title=\"11--\u591c\u5954Night Escape1968_\" href=\"https:\/\/01x10.tw\/en\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/04\/11-\u591c\u5954Night-Escape1968_-1.jpg\" data-rel=\"tb_nvf663\" class=\"themify_lightbox\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/01x10.tw\/en\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/04\/11-\u591c\u5954Night-Escape1968_-1-664x1024-300x225.jpg\" width=\"300\" height=\"225\" class=\"wp-post-image wp-image-2864\" title=\"Night Escape 1968\" alt=\"Night Escape 1968\"><\/a>            <\/dt>\n                    <\/dl>\n            <dl class=\"gallery-item\">\n            <dt class=\"gallery-icon\">\n            <a data-title=\"\" title=\"07-\u591c\u4f86\u4e86Night is Coming1968-psb\" href=\"https:\/\/01x10.tw\/en\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/04\/07-\u591c\u4f86\u4e86Night-is-Coming1968-psb-1.jpg\" data-rel=\"tb_nvf663\" class=\"themify_lightbox\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/01x10.tw\/en\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/04\/07-\u591c\u4f86\u4e86Night-is-Coming1968-psb-1-1024x652-300x225.jpg\" width=\"300\" height=\"225\" class=\"wp-post-image wp-image-2863\" title=\"Night is Coming 1968\" alt=\"Night is Coming 1968\"><\/a>            <\/dt>\n                    <\/dl>\n            <dl class=\"gallery-item\">\n            <dt class=\"gallery-icon\">\n            <a data-title=\"\" title=\"06--\u591c\u5de1Night Watch1968\" href=\"https:\/\/01x10.tw\/en\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/04\/06-\u591c\u5de1Night-Watch1968-1.jpg\" data-rel=\"tb_nvf663\" class=\"themify_lightbox\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/01x10.tw\/en\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/04\/06-\u591c\u5de1Night-Watch1968-1-1024x655-300x225.jpg\" width=\"300\" height=\"225\" class=\"wp-post-image wp-image-2862\" title=\"Night Watch 1968\" alt=\"Night Watch 1968\"><\/a>            <\/dt>\n                    <\/dl>\n            <dl class=\"gallery-item\">\n            <dt class=\"gallery-icon\">\n            <a data-title=\"\" title=\"05\u7b2c\u4e00\u6b21\u500b\u5c55-\u591c\u672a\u592eEndiess Night1968\" href=\"https:\/\/01x10.tw\/en\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/04\/05\u7b2c\u4e00\u6b21\u500b\u5c55-\u591c\u672a\u592eEndiess-Night1968-1.jpg\" data-rel=\"tb_nvf663\" class=\"themify_lightbox\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/01x10.tw\/en\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/04\/05\u7b2c\u4e00\u6b21\u500b\u5c55-\u591c\u672a\u592eEndiess-Night1968-1-1024x689-300x225.jpg\" width=\"300\" height=\"225\" class=\"wp-post-image wp-image-2861\" title=\"Endiess Night 1968\" alt=\"Endiess Night 1968\"><\/a>            <\/dt>\n                    <\/dl>\n            <dl class=\"gallery-item\">\n            <dt class=\"gallery-icon\">\n            <a data-title=\"\" title=\"03- \u8d77\u98db\u524dBefore Take of1967f\" href=\"https:\/\/01x10.tw\/en\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/04\/03-\u8d77\u98db\u524dBefore-Take-of1967f-1.jpg\" data-rel=\"tb_nvf663\" class=\"themify_lightbox\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/01x10.tw\/en\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/04\/03-\u8d77\u98db\u524dBefore-Take-of1967f-1-1024x750-300x225.jpg\" width=\"300\" height=\"225\" class=\"wp-post-image wp-image-2860\" title=\"Before Take of 1967\" alt=\"Before Take of 1967\"><\/a>            <\/dt>\n                    <\/dl>\n            <dl class=\"gallery-item\">\n            <dt class=\"gallery-icon\">\n            <a data-title=\"\" title=\"02\u7b2c\u4e00\u6b21\u500b\u5c55-\u5e8aBed1967\" href=\"https:\/\/01x10.tw\/en\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/04\/02\u7b2c\u4e00\u6b21\u500b\u5c55-\u5e8aBed1967-1.jpg\" data-rel=\"tb_nvf663\" class=\"themify_lightbox\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/01x10.tw\/en\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/04\/02\u7b2c\u4e00\u6b21\u500b\u5c55-\u5e8aBed1967-1-1024x709-300x225.jpg\" width=\"300\" height=\"225\" class=\"wp-post-image wp-image-2859\" title=\"Bed 1968\" alt=\"Bed 1968\"><\/a>            <\/dt>\n                    <\/dl>\n            <dl class=\"gallery-item\">\n            <dt class=\"gallery-icon\">\n            <a data-title=\"\" title=\"16-\u7b2c\u4e00\u6b21\u651d\u5f71\u500b\u5c55-\u4f38\u5411\u5929\u7a7aDutstretch into Sk1968\" href=\"https:\/\/01x10.tw\/en\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/04\/16-\u7b2c\u4e00\u6b21\u651d\u5f71\u500b\u5c55-\u4f38\u5411\u5929\u7a7aDutstretch-into-Sk1968-1.jpg\" data-rel=\"tb_nvf663\" class=\"themify_lightbox\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/01x10.tw\/en\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/04\/16-\u7b2c\u4e00\u6b21\u651d\u5f71\u500b\u5c55-\u4f38\u5411\u5929\u7a7aDutstretch-into-Sk1968-1-1024x689-300x225.jpg\" width=\"300\" height=\"225\" class=\"wp-post-image wp-image-2858\" title=\"Dutstretch into Sky 1968\" alt=\"Dutstretch into Sky 1968\"><\/a>            <\/dt>\n                    <\/dl>\n            <dl class=\"gallery-item\">\n            <dt class=\"gallery-icon\">\n            <a data-title=\"\" title=\"\" href=\"https:\/\/01x10.tw\/en\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/11\/1969-6.jpg\" data-rel=\"tb_nvf663\" class=\"themify_lightbox\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/01x10.tw\/en\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/11\/1969-6-688x1024-300x225.jpg\" width=\"300\" height=\"225\" class=\"wp-post-image wp-image-6790\" title=\"Black Car\" alt=\"Black Car\"><\/a>            <\/dt>\n                    <\/dl>\n            <dl class=\"gallery-item\">\n            <dt class=\"gallery-icon\">\n            <a data-title=\"\" title=\"\" href=\"https:\/\/01x10.tw\/en\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/10\/1969-5.jpg\" data-rel=\"tb_nvf663\" class=\"themify_lightbox\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/01x10.tw\/en\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/10\/1969-5-688x1024-300x225.jpg\" width=\"300\" height=\"225\" class=\"wp-post-image wp-image-6514\" title=\"River Bed 1968\" alt=\"River Bed 1968\"><\/a>            <\/dt>\n                    <\/dl>\n    <\/div>\n<\/div>\n<!-- \/module gallery -->        <\/div>\n                        <\/div>\n        <\/div>\n                        <div  data-lazy=\"1\" class=\"module_row themify_builder_row tb_zb66919 tf_w\">\n                        <div class=\"row_inner col_align_top tb_col_count_1 tf_box tf_rel\">\n                        <div  data-lazy=\"1\" class=\"module_column tb-column col-full tb_tg8p919 first\">\n                    <!-- module gallery -->\n<div  class=\"module gallery module-gallery tb_7jhx919 layout-grid  \" data-lazy=\"1\">\n    <\/div>\n<!-- \/module gallery -->        <\/div>\n                        <\/div>\n        <\/div>\n        <\/div>\n<!--\/themify_builder_content-->","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>1969 \u00a0First Exhibition\u00a0<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"parent":0,"menu_order":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","template":"","meta":{"footnotes":""},"class_list":["post-1624","page","type-page","status-publish","hentry","has-post-title","has-post-date","has-post-category","has-post-tag","has-post-comment","has-post-author",""],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO plugin v27.9 - https:\/\/yoast.com\/product\/yoast-seo-wordpress\/ -->\n<title>1969 \/ River Bed - Hsieh Chun-Te<\/title>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/01x10.tw\/en\/1969-river-bed\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"1969 \/ 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Cin\u00e9math\u00e8que Fran\u00e7aise, Former Deputy Director of the Centre Pompidou)<\/strong><\/p> <p>There is an expression in French, \u201cavoir de la suite dans les id\u00e9es,\u201d which is used to describe fidelity to one\u2019s ideas, a grounding in inaugural positions whose secret, personal motivations are then enriched, redeployed and redistributed along the way.<\/p> <p>Ever since the 1960s Hsieh Chun-Te has been constructing his universe with unfailing assurance and constancy. Some of his key motifs originated in those years. Which is not to say that making the later work, including the most recent series, TENKY, has been calm, smooth sailing. Calm is not what distinguishes Hsieh\u2019s work from that of other contemporary artists. That said, \u201cluxury and pleasure,\u201d to take the two other terms from the famous title by Henri Matisse (<i>luxe, calme et volupt\u00e9<\/i>), have often featured in the work of this Taiwanese artist.<\/p> <p>A superficial approach to this work might place it within an international tendency bringing together such artists as Gilbert and George, Jo\u00ebl-Peter Witkin, Pierre &amp; Gilles and David LaChapelle: in other words, a tendency that uses the photographic medium to create installations in which magnified or manipulated bodies are set in landscapes whose artificial lighting blurs the frontiers between the truth of nature and the artifice of the studio. But that would be to make a mistake about Hsieh\u2019s world and visual project. The retrospective approach recently initiated by the artist, allowing us to rediscover his works from the 1960s, gives a better idea of its specificity.<\/p> <p>Right from the start, Hsieh\u2019s exceptional palette was black and white. What will impress us today, ideally, will not be just the infinite modulation of greys, something most twentieth-century masters of photography also aimed to achieve. No, Hsieh\u2019s obsessions lie elsewhere. They are embodied, more particularly, in the conflicts between <i>focus<\/i> and the diffraction of light, between the <i>sharp<\/i> and the blurred, between the clarity of the contours and the grain of the prints. The artist\u2019s other obsession lies in the conflict between forms of matter: marshes and epidermises, the accumulation of stones and capillary streams, the amorphous fragility of bodies and sculpted power of machines.<\/p> <p>The images we are seeing today, most of them made in the late 1960s, could be interpreted as fragments of life captured in the urgency of encounters accompanied by the accidents due to precipitousness. In fact, these images already express Hsieh\u2019s simultaneously <i>symbolist<\/i> and abstract ambition.<\/p> <p>Note: <i>symbolist<\/i> and not symbolic. There is a subtle distinction between the late nineteenth-century movement in painting and poetry, Symbolism, from the attempt to bestow a secondary meaning on the organisation of forms. There is, indeed, an undeniable symbolism in Hsieh\u2019s work, and especially recently. From Gustave Dor\u00e9 to Burne Jones, from Alfred Kubin to William Blake, we can discern the influence in the way the bodies are placed and in their confrontation with nature, all being part of a lyrical poetry which is ultimately concerned with conflict between tellurian and celestial forces. Most of all, though, these images which inaugurated Hsieh\u2019s work manifest a torment of abstraction.<\/p> <p><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" title=\"busgirl\" src=\"https:\/\/01x10.tw\/en\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/04\/busgirl.jpg\" alt=\"busgirl\" width=\"1460\" height=\"965\"><strong>[ Window ] 1968<\/strong><\/p> <p>Image 01 is an extreme close-up on a body which fills almost all the space. As ever, there is a troubling eroticism in Hsieh\u2019s vision. Here, the framing suggests that the woman\u2019s dress is billowing up outside the frame. The close-up <i>depraves<\/i> the forms of the body and, upon close observation, there is utter uncertainty as to whether this figure is truly a human or just a doll, a living being or a lifeless dummy. Furthermore, the photo is backlit, and the bright light coming through the window \u201cburns\u201d the outlines of the exhibited body. Like a vampire, this mysterious silhouette seems to be eaten up by the light, disintegrating into an incandescent powder. That is why I feel I can speak here of Hsieh\u2019s \u201cabstract torment\u201d: the disappearance of figures, and a kind of terror of light, which are later developed to an apocalyptic degree in the <i>Tenky<\/i> series.<\/p> <p><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" title=\"Bed 1967\" src=\"https:\/\/01x10.tw\/en\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/04\/02\u7b2c\u4e00\u6b21\u500b\u5c55-\u5e8aBed1967-1.jpg\" alt=\"Bed 1967\" width=\"2000\" height=\"1384\"><strong>[ Bed ] 1968<\/strong><\/p> <p>\u00a0uses and abuses light. No doubt it is the same window through which the fire passes here. But the interplay between appearance and disappearance in the previous image is acted out in this instance by the body reclining in the light, its nudity carefully hidden\/revealed by the artist. This body on which the black of an uncertain garment (rubber or leather?) opposes the white of the skin (the dazzling complexion of the buttocks), replays within the image the contrast between light and shadow which geometrically structures the space and references the medium itself.<\/p> <p><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" title=\"Endiess Night 1968\" src=\"https:\/\/01x10.tw\/en\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/04\/05\u7b2c\u4e00\u6b21\u500b\u5c55-\u591c\u672a\u592eEndiess-Night1968-1.jpg\" alt=\"Endiess Night 1968\" width=\"1500\" height=\"1010\"><strong>[\u00a0<\/strong>Endless Night ]\u00a01968<\/p> <p>Endless Night\u00a0is even more audacious. I mentioned earlier the coexistence of the human body and the machine. This image is one of the finest examples of this relationship which evokes a vision pertinent to both Taiwan and the big city of Taipei traversed by waves of motorbikes and scooters. Hsieh\u2019s image is interesting because the image it conveys is one of immobility. What we see is clearly a garage, with the machines at rest. It is their shine and shape that the artist wants to bring to our attention: hence the close-up on the right of the coachwork of one of these machines. In addition to this, however, a young girl who could otherwise be bestriding one of these engines is lying on the floor, between them. And this languorous abandon creates an equivalence between the mechanical and the human orders. &lt;On a waste ground\u00a0&gt;\u00a0provides comparable reasons for surprise.<\/p> <p><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" title=\"Dutstretch into Sky 1968\" src=\"https:\/\/01x10.tw\/en\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/04\/16-\u7b2c\u4e00\u6b21\u651d\u5f71\u500b\u5c55-\u4f38\u5411\u5929\u7a7aDutstretch-into-Sk1968-1.jpg\" alt=\"Dutstretch into Sky 1968\" width=\"2067\" height=\"1391\"><strong>[ Dutstretch into Sky ]<\/strong>\u00a01968<\/p> <p>The French term <i>terrain vague<\/i> conveys its imprecise urban status and formlessness, its atmosphere of disquiet and expectancy \u2013\u00a0the remains of a car occupy the centre of the image. In the opening previously filled by the window of a door now reduced to paltry remains, a human body has been thrust\u00a0\u2013 all we can see are the legs sticking up skywards. What are we to think? Has the body fallen from a great height? Fallen from another vehicle, as suggested by the aeroplane taking off in the background? Hsieh\u2019s approach here is probably meant to be humorous. But it is no doubt more gravely pessimistic if we consider the equivalence between the piece of scrap and the equally ruined body sticking out of it, which appears to have met its fate at the same time as the vehicle in which it remains imprisoned. In addition, might this be a way for the artist to evoke the coming fate of those who are flying in that distant jet? Or is the artist making another suggestion? Are the modern city seen to the left of the image and the people who live there both headed for the fate of the enigmatic composition in the centre of the image? Or, finally, is the central motif the metaphor for this city in the background? Here the image\u2019s symbolist ambition cannot be separated from its symbolic intent. This picture comes some twenty years before the <i>Raw<\/i> series, and yet it could easily be part of it. Like that series, image 04 was made on the basis of a strategy of a twofold delay or wait This strategy lies at the heart of Hsieh\u2019s aesthetic, well beyond the RAW series, and still constitutes a founding principle in the recent works.<\/p> <p>The first wait is the one that corresponds to the time of making the photo as such, the exposure time needed to imprint the scene on the film. This variable exposure time depends on the quality of light. But we may assume that the quality of the images and the final form they take on the gallery or museum walls will have been taken to justify the attentive adjustments made during the production process.<\/p> <p>The second wait is for \u201cthe right moment\u201d to capture the scene. This is not the \u201cdecisive moment,\u201d to use the term from French humanist photography. It is a \u201cgood moment,\u201d a moment that has been waited and hoped for and, of course, prepared and programmed. In the photograph here, it was necessary that the aeroplane <b>cross the image for a fraction of a second<\/b>. The artist had to wait in order to capture this ensemble. The actor in the image, whose legs are all we see, had to wait in that uncomfortable and acrobatic position. Another thing the artist and actor had to wait for was for the sun to be so positioned that the shadow of the two legs was visible \u201cin the right place.\u201d We know that Hsieh does not manipulate his images. He stages them, composes them like a painter, but he does <i>rehearse<\/i> them, and does not always succeed. He makes them subtly, like a film director. And although that body \u201cthrown on the scrap heap\u201d signifies an undeniable pessimism and a despair that bodes only ill for the future of humanity, the very making of this image, on the contrary, betrays a paradoxical optimism as to the possibility of its success. The artist\u2019s attentive patience has allowed a successful balance between objects placed seemingly by chance in an unlikely place, bodies that <i>pose<\/i>, and a fleeting event. The image is thus complex beyond its immediate, burlesque effect of surprise. This is a complexity of both production and conception.<\/p> <p>Among the images from the past, two textural pieces stand out.<\/p> <p><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" title=\"Swamp 1968\" src=\"https:\/\/01x10.tw\/en\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/04\/1969-w1.jpg\" alt=\"Swamp 1968\" width=\"1200\" height=\"791\"><strong>[ Swamp ] 1968\u00a0<\/strong><\/p> <p>Represents a kind of swamp or, more exactly, a landscape of dunes covered with the kind of vegetation that grows on river estuaries. The solar star is still there and it consumes part of the horizon. A first third of the image is darkened by the plants that grow in floodable areas. Then, in the middle plane, sandy ground that is marbled or flecked like a carpet on which walks a figure of whom we see only the immaculately white back, and whose hair seems to merge with the foliage on the ground. This unexpected metamorphosis resulting from the decapitation of the figure moving towards the centre of the image bestows a strange status on the body, as un unidentified object which reveals, by contagion, the general tendency of the representation of landscape towards abstraction. There is nothing \u201cdocumentary\u201d about Hsieh\u2019s vision. Like the vanity that Blaise Pascale condemned in painting, one could justifiably designate comparable consequences in Hsieh\u2019s photographic tableaus. But the word vanity could also be used with another meaning, again taken from the field of painting: Hsieh Chun-Te\u2019s photographic tableaus encourage us to meditate on the instability of signs and forms that specify humanity. The Taiwanese artist, eyewitness on an island that for many years has felt an anxious political precariousness in the face of the immense nearby land from which it has separated, and from which it protects itself, has real legitimacy when it comes to expressing the ephemeral fate of all humanity, and he does so with genuine metaphysical ambition.<\/p>\n<img src=\"https:\/\/01x10.tw\/en\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/10\/1969-5-688x1024-600x893.jpg\" width=\"600\" height=\"893\" title=\"River Bed 1968\" alt=\"River Bed 1968\" srcset=\"https:\/\/01x10.tw\/en\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/10\/1969-5-688x1024-600x893.jpg 600w, https:\/\/01x10.tw\/en\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/10\/1969-5-269x400.jpg 269w, https:\/\/01x10.tw\/en\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/10\/1969-5-688x1024.jpg 688w, https:\/\/01x10.tw\/en\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/10\/1969-5-768x1144.jpg 768w, https:\/\/01x10.tw\/en\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/10\/1969-5-1031x1536.jpg 1031w, https:\/\/01x10.tw\/en\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/10\/1969-5.jpg 1104w\" sizes=\"(max-width: 600px) 100vw, 600px\" \/>\n<p><strong>[ River Bed ] 1968<\/strong><\/p> <p>Bed 1968\u00a0is even more impressive in terms of the clash of materials. The chaos of stones is represented in such a way as to seem without limits, extending beyond the frame, in an all-over approach which creates a tellurian darkness in the image. At the top of one of the biggest rocks is a face extended by slender shoulders. Reminiscent of M\u00e9lisande\u2019s fountain-like locks, the hair comes down to the lower edge of the image. The picture could be seen as a reverse version of Botticelli\u2019s <i>Birth of Venus<\/i>. The whiteness of the epidermis, the frozen, gaping eyes, the neglected hair, without a trace of wind, all suggest death rather than birth, doubt about the endurance of the human rather than reborn confidence.<\/p> <p>But the disquiet exuded by this image, with its admirable movement of lines and modulated greys comparable to the drawings and washes of ancient China, is counterbalanced by the formal boldness and, once again, the message. This image may trouble and frighten because of the ghostly appearance that has neither consistency nor volume. Nevertheless, it is the brightness of this face which engenders an undeniably hypnotic effect on the beholder.<\/p> <p>I have no hesitation in arguing that this work by Hsieh Chun-Te is one of his most disturbing icons, one that I would link and at the same time contrast with the incredible, absolutely antagonistic\u00a0<img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" title=\"Ximenting 1968\" src=\"https:\/\/01x10.tw\/en\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/04\/1969-w2.jpg\" alt=\"Ximenting 1968\" width=\"1200\" height=\"791\"><strong>[ Ximending ] 1969<\/strong><\/p> <p>Just as structured as the preceding images, structured in two parts separated by the zigzag of the parapet of a bridge, a female form melts into the movement of the light. The distant city, carried away in the narcissistic brightness of the lights of consumption, seems to threaten to swallow up this moving body in order to escape hell. It irresistibly reminds me of the <i>Tenky<\/i> series in which flaming nature threatens an Eve who has been expelled from a scrubby, stony paradise. It is likely that the artist\u2019s return to what could be considered \u201cyouthful works\u201d has revealed or even confirmed that his whole body of work is marked by the fundamental threat of the destruction of life by combustion. And the use of colour in the recent works has not diminished the apocalyptic torment of an artist from whom the disasters of progress and indifference to the natural fate of the world are to a large extent what drives his passion in composing images. Might we posit that colour serves this incendiary terror even more effectively?<\/p> <p>To conclude this look back over works that are nearly half a century old, I would like to emphasise the remarkable constancy of Hsieh\u2019s method. Well before artist\u2019s photography became dominant on museum and gallery walls, I note with great surprise that Hsieh was already conceiving of the photographic act as essentially an act of staging.<\/p> <p>But then, should we really consider this work as belonging to the trend of artist\u2019s photography? No doubt we need to find another term than the French <i>photographie plasticienne<\/i>, one that, in avoiding reference to the <i>tableau vivant<\/i>, would designate an undertaking somewhere between photography and cinema. It is not a matter of comparing results. Hsieh\u2019s large-scale photographic compositions make no attempt to hide their immobile performance and their dynamic disquiet. They are far from the world of cinema. However, a few images might bring back memories of the films of Nagisa Oshima, for example, or, to take a less \u201cclassical\u201d filmmaker, Fruit Chan.<\/p> <p>The point here is similarity of <i>mise-en-sc\u00e8ne<\/i>. Each of Hsieh\u2019s photographs \u2013 and this is a method that he began to apply as early as the 1960s \u2013 is the final step in a slow process and a long preparation that comprises finding locations, rehearsing with the \u201cactors,\u201d making anticipatory sketches, designing special costumes and many other preparatory actions that will obtain what one could think of as a <i>film condensed<\/i> into a single photograph, or the equivalent of a single frame \u2013 but with nothing before or after. What distinguishes Hsieh\u2019s highly constructed images from the images of other contemporary artists is the multiplicity of visual approaches within each image. These destabilise the representation and express the complexity of its making. I am referring here, among many other aspects, to the oppositions in the textures of the image.<\/p> <p>Looking back today, I can think of only one artist working in the medium of photography who combines documentary ambition with poetic lyricism: Jeff Wall. Notwithstanding the considerable distance between them, a distance that is more than just the geographical distance between Vancouver and Taipei, these two artists accord an importance to their photographic staging proportionate to the weight of contemporary issues, and do so at a time when nothing is easier than making images. But <i>what<\/i> images? Of course, many artists take time in their studio to painstakingly build up the compositions in their photos. But in most cases, sadly, the result is just a kitsch backdrop. No doubt, then, it is long before the shot can be taken that an artist like Hsieh, almost forgetting the decisive moment of shutter release, <i>reflects on<\/i> the world\u2019s besetting ills.<\/p>\n<h3 style=\"text-align: center;\">Gallery<\/h3>\n[gallery columns=\"2\" link=\"file\" size=\"full\" ids=\"6515,6519,6517,2867,2866,2865,2864,2863,2862,2861,2860,2859,2858,6790,6514\"]\n[gallery columns=\"2\" link=\"file\" size=\"full\" ids=\"844,851,1004,1005,845,1006,2931,2856,2855,2854,2853,2852,2851,2850,2849\"]","_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/01x10.tw\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/pages\/1624","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/01x10.tw\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/pages"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/01x10.tw\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/page"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/01x10.tw\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/01x10.tw\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=1624"}],"version-history":[{"count":103,"href":"https:\/\/01x10.tw\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/pages\/1624\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":7415,"href":"https:\/\/01x10.tw\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/pages\/1624\/revisions\/7415"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/01x10.tw\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=1624"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}