英文摘要 |
The terms 'ghosts' and 'spirits' have recently been commonly adopted in the aesthetic discourse as the function of narrating photography, images and installations in the field of contemporary art writings in Taiwan and across Asia. The images, as if providing a portal for the return of the spirits of the past, allow the repressed and suppressed able to traverse to and from past and present, reality and fiction in the form of apparitions. Nevertheless, how should we understand the relationship between the image and the apparition when the apparition within the image escapes its role as the metaphor and no longer merely refers to the notion of 'the return of the dead' or 'the affiliation with the soul', and no longer carries the burdens and traumas of history? When one expects to 'see' the ghosts of their lost beloved through the Blindfold Taoist Ritual, how is this 'seeing' of an 'image' made possible without the interference of light? To begin with, the text discusses the characteristics of ghosts within realizations and critiques of images in Taiwanese contemporary art before further reflecting on the definition of ghosts. Through investigation of the two examples, 'Ghost in Supernatural Video' and 'Blindfold Taoist Ritual', particularly in their image production, mechanism of reading as well as ways of projection, the text explores the implied perceptions of the image through 'the photographed ghosts' and 'the image ritual without light' in surveillance images. These are 'images' taken less seriously, and at the same time, there has been the intricacy of narrating these 'images' and putting them in context through rational reasoning. To conclude, the author attempts to ponder over the characteristics of ghosts by means of the still-evolving notion of 'image' as well as its relating concepts in Taiwanese contemporary art. |