Artists

Photo Credit: NIU Chun-Chiang

YANG Che-Yi

YANG Che-Yi's Art Work
YANG Che-Yi's Exhibition
YANG Che-Yi's Art Work Exhibition Photo
YANG Che-Yi's Exhibition Poster
YANG Che-Yi and Exhibition Visitors

YANG Che-Yi

Location Germany / Berlin
Residency Künstlerhaus Bethanien
Year of the Grant 2016
Work Empty City Strategy
YANG Che-Yi, born in Yilan, Taiwan in 1981, engages in the research of environmental sciences, now is the art director of Wandering Photograph and the managing director of the Children Photographic Society of Taiwan. After a serious illness in 2006, he started to rethink the meaning of life and turned to devote himself to photographic creations. His artworks were collected by the Kiyosato Museum of Photographic Arts in Japan in 2007. Recently, he recorded the changes of landscapes, pursued the origin of land and concerned the issues of environment and society positively by images.

Thoughts on Residency Program

As Germany faces the influx of millions of refugees, of which a large proportion are young children, Empty City Strategy is a creative project that spans three cities with an attempt to bring this significant social impact into the spotlight. From the perspective of environmental sociology and environmental education, I want to highlight the process of urbanization in rural areas through photography, three-channel video recording, concrete modeling, painting, single-channel lyrical installation in the Taiwanese dialect, and Chinese pinyin documents. Our desires have led us and the government to ignore the environmental warnings by over developing the cities and the result is the real estate bubble. Nowadays, there are already thousands of ghost towns all over the world that are not only the product of globalization, but also an absurd “Empty City Strategy” carefully planned by a few members of society.

In Germany, art is everywhere in the atmosphere. There are exhibition openings every evening and even the smallest venues are carefully curated down to the tiniest details. Over there, I realized that art can also function in cultural and diplomatic activities for Taiwan to be better seen in a deeper, quieter, and more thoughtful discussion.

It was a great experience to be able to organize a solo exhibition. I learned how to work with people from other nations to accomplish the common goal, and started to exchange ideas with the international community during the process. In survival of the fittest, the artist will not only present their artworks but, more importantly, must also be able to communicate with others.