They Do Not Understand Each Other

They Do Not Understand Each Other: Online Programmes

They Do Not Understand Each Other

A Short, Performing, Story – Performance Art by Heman Chong

They Do Not Understand Each Other Guided Tour

They Do Not Understand Each Other: Wonderland IG Challenge

They Do Not Understand Each Other: Online Programmes

Date & Time

Please refer to the programme introduction

Location

Online

Price

Free of charge

General

Stay connected with us from far and near.

Tai Kwun Contemporary launches an online series of tours and conversations, in addition to our VR 360° virtual gallery. On select Wednesdays and Saturdays in August, we will live-stream tours of our current exhibitions and conversations with artists. We hope to highlight the enduring power of art in connecting people and communities, and to sustain an inquisitive attitude towards our world at this challenging time.  

In these live presentations, you can submit your questions and engage with your fellow attendees through the chat function.


Programme Timetable

Online Tour of They Do Not Understand Each Other

Date Time Language Host
05.08.2020 (Wed) 7-8pm English Tobias Berger 
19.08.2020 (Wed) 7-8pm Cantonese Daniel Szehin Ho
09.09.2020 (Wed) 4-5pm Putonghua Daniel Szehin Ho, Erin Li

Curator and Artists' Talk

Date & Time Curator Artists
Trust in the Public 
(Japanese, closed captioning in English)
08.08.2020 (Sat)
6-7:15pm HKT
(7-8:15pm JST)
Yuka Uematsu  Akira Takayama, Kohei Sekigawa

Cultural Expectations and Premonitions
(English)

12.09.2020
(Sat)
7-8:30pm
June Yap Agnes Arellano, Ho Tzu Nyen

Curator and Artists' Talk

Trust in the Public: Akira Takayama and Kohei Sekigawa in conversation with Yuka Uematsu

Date: 08.08.2020 (Sat)
Time: 6-7:15pm HKT (7-8:15pm JST)
Language: Japanese (closed captioning in English)
Live medium: Zoom, Tai Kwun Contemporary Facebook page & "Watch Party" on Tai Kwun Facebook page

Every day at 3 pm Hong Kong time, the artist Kohei Sekigawa hums for us. With travel restrictions and quarantine requirements, Sekigawa is unable to join us for his One-Minute Events, where he executes a series of performances in an art space using minimal props and settings. He is not live streamed, and we place our trust in him—reaching out across the ocean like the sounding of a vast echo. In another call and response project, the artist and theatre director Akira Takayama's McDonald's Radio University is a roving lecture programme that takes place in McDonald's or their replicas where visitors can access a syllabus using a QR code. The syllabus is composed of scripts written by “professors”—all individuals considered to be “refugees” or “migrants” in their host countries in a collaborative process based on their life experiences. 

Yuka Uematsu, curator at The National Museum of Art, Osaka and co-curator of They Do Not Understand Each Other at Tai Kwun Contemporary will engage Takayama and Sekigawa in a conversation on performative actions by people often unseen in society, activating the democratic potential of commercial spaces such as fast food joints or creating resonance through intimate distances. With an emphasis on public access in contemporary art spaces, "Trust in the Public" will be centred on the suspension of belief that is necessary in learning how to be together differently.

Watch again: 


Cultural Expectations and Premonitions: Conversation with Agnes Arellano, Ho Tzu Nyen, and June Yap

Date: 12.09.2020 (Sat)
Time: 7-8:30pm
Language: English
Live medium: Zoom, Tai Kwun Contemporary Facebook page & "Watch Party" on Tai Kwun Facebook page

A moon goddess emerges from the gallery floor at Tai Kwun Contemporary. Cast from artist Agnes Arellano's own body, the work was first shown in 1983 as part of her first "inscape" or personal landscape. Haliya Bathing is derived from Bicol mythology and lies at the intersection of the feminine and sacred. Arellano's Haliya is pregnant and posed to give birth. The work gives life, a life that is yet to be determined. Drawing from another form of historicity is Ho Tzu Nyen's EARTH, which the artist describes as "doing painting with video." Drawing from European masters of mythological depiction including Géricault's The Raft of the Medusa (1818-19), Caravaggio's David and Goliath (1599), and Antonine-Jean Gros's Bonaparte Visiting the Plague-Stricken at Jaffa (1804), Ho's work appears to us as premonition of the times we live in now.  

June Yap, Director of Curatorial, Collections, and Programmes at the Singapore Art Museum and co-curator of They Do Not Understand Each Other at Tai Kwun Contemporary, will be in conversation with artists Agnes Arellano and Ho Tzu Nyen, as moderated by Hera Chan. The conversation will wend about different ways of understanding through acts of translation and creating resonances between art works—particularly in this time of physical isolation. The artist will share about their work in the exhibition as well as their practices at large, thinking together how artists can act as agents of intuition, helping us to guide our understanding of what is yet to come. 

The sacred and the mythical, the physical and the erotic, the magical and the mundane, the religious and the profane, and music and song all permeate the art of Filipina artist Agnes Arellano. Drawing from rich personal experience and an extraordinary range of influences, she makes some of the most dramatic art in Asia. Best known for surrealist and expressionist work in plaster (cast and directly modelled), bronze, and cold-cast marble, Arellano's work tends to stress the integration of individual elements into one totality or "inscape". She has participated in international group exhibitions in Fukuoka, Havana, Berlin, Johannesburg, New York, Brisbane and Singapore. Her works are in the permanent collection of the Fukuoka Asian Art Museum, the Singapore Art Museum, and the APEC Sculpture Park by the Naru River, Busan South Korea.

June Yap is Director of Curatorial, Collections, and Programmes at the Singapore Art Museum, where she oversees content creation and museum programming. Her prior roles include Guggenheim UBS MAP Curator (South and Southeast Asia), Deputy Director and Curator at the Institute of Contemporary Arts Singapore, and curator at the Singapore Art Museum. Amongst exhibitions she has curated are They Do Not Understand Each Other at Tai Kwun Contemporary, No Country: Contemporary Art for South and Southeast Asia as part of the Guggenheim UBS MAP Global Art Initiative (2014), The Future of Exhibition: It Feels Like I’ve Been Here Before, Singapore (2011), Paradise is Elsewhere, Germany (2009). She is the author of Retrospective: A Historiographical Aesthetic in Contemporary Singapore and Malaysia (2016).

Watch again: 


Online Tour of They Do Not Understand Each Other

Date: 05.08.2020 (Wed)
Time: 7-8pm
Host: Tobias Berger, Head of Art at Tai Kwun 
Language: English
Live medium: Zoom, Tai Kwun Contemporary Instagram 

Join Tobias Berger, Head of Art at Tai Kwun, on a live tour of the group exhibition They Do Not Understand Each Other, where you will get to learn more about the artworks and also ask Tobias Berger questions live!


Date: 19.08.2020 (Wed)
Time: 7-8pm
Host: Daniel Szehin Ho
Language: Cantonese
Live medium: Zoom, Tai Kwun Contemporary Instagram 

Join Daniel Szehin Ho, Editor and Project Manager at Tai Kwun, on a live tour of the group exhibition They Do Not Understand Each Other, where you will get to learn more about the artworks and also ask Daniel Szehin Ho questions live!


Date: 09.09.2020 (Wed)
Time: 4-5pm
Host: Daniel Szehin Ho, Erin Li
Language: Putonghua
Live medium: Zaiyi

Join Daniel Szehin Ho, Editor and Project Manager; Erin Lin, Assistant Curator, on a live tour of the group exhibition They Do Not Understand Each Other, where you will get to learn more about the artworks and also ask them questions live!