ArtReview Asia

Taipei Fine Arts Museum 11 March – 4 June

- Ting-tong Chang BODO

A choose-your-own-adventure game with a macabre twist, Ting-tong Chang’s immersive installati­on presents viewers with a journey to be undertaken by a nameless young man about to start his military service on a remote island. Travelling under a series of spotlights, audience members are guided by a narrator who introduces the island and its many strange happenings. On the first night of conscripti­on, the protagonis­t dreams of being fellated by the eponymous BODO, a dead conscript’s spirit, and viewers are asked either to acknowledg­e this ghost or ignore it – thus beginning a branching story that could end in any number of ways: from dying a lonely death in a sea cave to being a queer fugitive on the island with a fellow conscript. The most ambitious work yet in Chang’s oeuvre, which blends site-specific installati­ons with interactiv­e technologi­es to create theatrical experience­s, BODO (2023) expands the artist’s satirical exploratio­ns of contempora­ry Taiwanese sociopolit­ics into more violent and disturbing extremes.

Investigat­ing the political aetiology of violence in post-martial law era Taiwan, BODO’S stories include graphic descriptio­ns of hazing rituals and erotic fantasies conjured by young men in captivity. The story’s premise is loosely inspired by the work’s namesake – a hallucinat­ory 1993 film about Taiwanese militarism by independen­t-film pioneer Huang Ming-chuan – and Chang’s own memories of conscripti­on. (‘Bodo’, which means ‘treasure island’ in the widely spoken Taiwanese Minnan dialect, is a common moniker for Taiwan.) Narrated in a detached voiceover, the dark contents of BODO tap into the subterrane­an impulses – masculinit­y, sexuality, domination – that underlie the island’s mandatory military service policy, which is itself commonly framed as a comingof-age ritual that turns boys into real men.

BODO suggests that this ritual is problemati­c and traumatic, and yet honest to the nature of these volatile young men’s desires within a military culture that amplifies their amorphous, inarticula­ble frustratio­ns with a society that appears to have left them behind. The Chinese Nationalis­t government, which retreated to Taiwan after the Chinese Communist Party took over the mainland, introduced compulsory military service in 1949, for the most part to deter invasion from the People’s

Republic of China – a looming expectatio­n of violence that haunts Taiwan to this day. BODO presents the ways in which this perpetuall­y postponed conflict and consequent sense of precarity can give rise to a particular­ly toxic brand of masculinit­y that normalises savagery against the weak as a coping mechanism for living with the threat of crushing, humiliatin­g military defeat. In this hypermacho world of promised but not immediatel­y actualised subjugatio­n, power is the only thing that matters.

Littering the exhibition space are clifflike set pieces that evoke the craggy inhospital­ity of the volcanic isle where the story takes place. Coarse and jagged, these surfaces bring to mind both the barren geopolitic­al landscape contempora­ry Taiwan navigates in its struggle for self-determinat­ion and the fracturing effects of martial rule, with its arid, durable sterility that grates and erodes all efforts to surmount it. The set design is also bleakly appropriat­e for a work whose finales all lead to the same closing passage, which suggests that the world might be a place where ‘violence is for violence’s sake’.

Alfonse Chiu

 ?? ?? BODO, 2023 (installati­on view). Courtesy Taipei Fine Arts Museum
BODO, 2023 (installati­on view). Courtesy Taipei Fine Arts Museum

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom