2010-02-24 09:09:05
文章內容
BY - garygao

Michael Lin is highly regarded for his monumental painted installations that reconfigure and redesign public spaces. Using patterns based on traditional Taiwanese textiles, his work has been integrated into museum cafés, lobbies, galleries and façades in many countries, dynamically transforming their architecture and the way they are perceived by the public.
Michael Lin - Georgia Street Plaza 23.01-02.05, 2010 [production image] paint on aluminum panels Photo: Rachel TophamFor his solo exhibition at the Vancouver Art Gallery, Michael Lin has created an enormous hand-painted mural that will cover the Gallery’s Georgia Street façade, bringing his artwork outside the traditional confines of the Gallery space. Expanding on his interest in veiling the institution, he has also conceived a book-wrapping project for the Gallery Store, which will cover Gallery publications in a wrapping paper of his own design.
Raised in Taiwan, Lin lives between Brussels, Shanghai and Taipei. His work reflects the influence of these diverse sites of cultural production and his movement between them.
Michael Lin: A Modest Veilis organized by the Vancouver Art Gallery and presented with Vancouver 2010 Cultural Olympiad and the City of Vancouver's Public Art Program. The exhibition is sponsored by Omega and supported by the Council for Cultural Affairs (Chinese Taipei) in collaboration with the Taipei Cultural Center of TECO in New York. Curated by Bruce Grenville, senior curator, with Emmy Lee, assistant curator.
Michael Lin Installation at Vancouver Art Gallery
Taiwanese artist Michael Lin has installed a 6,000-square-foot, hand-painted mural at the Vancouver Art Gallery just in time for next month’s Winter Olympics. It’s evocative of the bright florals popular in his native Taiwan and the bold artiness of Lin’s other hometowns: when not in Taipei, he splits his time between Brussels and Shanghai. And he’s well-known for such huge works: previous installments have been at the The Contemporary Museum Honolulu, Asian Art Museum in San Fran, Long Island City's P.S.1, and Musee d’Art Moderne de la Ville de Paris. Behind the scenes pics after the jump.