Chen Long-bin explained

Chen Long-bin
Native Name:陳龍斌
Native Name Lang:zh
Birth Place:Taipei, Taiwan

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Chen Long-bin is a Taiwanese contemporary sculptor.

Biography

Chen Long-bin was born in 1964 in Taipei, Taiwan. He received a BFA from the Fine Arts Department at Tunghai University, and an MFA from the School of Visual Arts in New York. He is known for using the cultural debris of our modern society, such as old, discarded books, newspapers, phonebooks, and magazines as the medium for his sculptures. Chen is self-taught in carving wood, but started showing interest in our paper culture as a viable material for art – phonebooks, magazines, and computer paper when PC’s began growing popular in 1993. The advent of the personal computer changed the entire nature of information documentation – a role books used to play. Thus, by turning paper into the original wood for his sculptures, Chen offers renewed value to the meaning of paper. He uses chainsaws, drills, band saws, sanders, and scissors, along with other carpenter's tools to shape his remarkable busts and figures, which appear stone, or even marble like from a distance.[1]

Chen who has won prizes in Europe, Taipei, and Japan, has exhibited extensively at galleries and museums for many years in Japan, Korea, France, (Germany), Hong Kong, Italy, London, Singapore, Taiwan, and the United States, and can also be found in numerous international public and private collections. He has been awarded artist fellowship grants from Taiwan's National Endowment for the Arts, the Joan Mitchell Foundation in New York and the Freeman Foundation. In 1995, he received the Visitor's Prize of the Sixth Triennial of Small Scale Sculpture in Stuttgart, Germany. And in 1998, he received the Silver Prize at the Osaka Triennial in Japan.[2]

For Chen, using recycled materials to make art stresses the challenges presented by endless human consumption and waste, as well as the tantamount ecological problems of waste accumulation and disposal, the destruction of forests, and the mindless use of nonrenewable resources. The reams of used computer paper disprove the assurance of the electronic paper-less office, which instead augments the use of paper, as printing is made much easier. Furthermore, his choice of medium also poses as a commentary on the loss of books as aesthetic objects, which have been replaced by mass-produced cheaply made paperbacks.Books are extremely important to Chen. However, it is not the book itself, but its educational heritage, literary importance, historical knowledge, and the sacredness of the written word that he treasures most.[1]

The type of materials he acquires in a sense determines the sculpture he creates. While in New York, he scoured the streets of Manhattan collecting discarded refuse, scouted offices for their rejected reams of paper, visited brownstone streets to gather cast off telephone books when new ones were distributed. And now, living in Taipei, Chen obtains his material from university libraries and bookstores, publishing companies, archeological museums, and telephone companies.[1]

The special quality of Chen's works is that people can still read the pages.“I try to make sculptures that are appropriate for the content of the books. In my concept, the form and content is united together; the content gives me the idea of the form. Yellow Pages give me one kind of idea; books discarded from libraries inspire different styles…" Often, his art reflects the content of the pages within, such as one hanging installation featuring spirals of books with peepholes in which one can view a scene from the story within the original pages.

Solo exhibitions

Continental Express, Frederieke Taylor Gallery, New York, 2008
Chen Long-Bin: Reading Sculpture – Culture Warrior, Plum Blossoms Gallery, Hong Kong, 2006
• Buddha Hurricane, Frederieke Taylor Gallery, 2006
• Reading Sculpture-Los Angeles project, The Lowe Gallery, Santa Monica, CA, 2005
Reading Sculpture-Kids project, Kidspace at MassMoca, North Adams, MA, 2004
Reading Sculpture-Atlanta project, The Lowe Gallery, Atlanta, GA, 2004
Reading Sculpture-Roma project, Galleria Ca'a d'Oro, Rome, Italy, 2004
Reading Sculpture-Milan project, Galleria Ca'a d'Oro, Milan, Italy, 2004
Reading Sculpture-Vermont project, Vermont Studio Center, VT, 2004
Reading Sculpture, Frederieke Taylor Gallery, 2003
Alternative Study, Eslite Bookstore, Taiwan, 1999
Taiwan Study, Cultural Affairs Department of Taiwan Provincial Government, Taiwan, 1998
Humanity, Taipei Fine Arts Museum, Taipei, Taiwan, 1997
Reading Sculpture, Eight Floor Gallery, New York, 1995
Culture Empire, American Institute in Taiwan, Taipei, Taiwan, 1994
Tools, Space 2 Gallery, Taipei, Taiwan, 1992

Group exhibitions

Rebound, Halsey Gallery, College of Charleston, SC, 2013
Transformation: From ordinary to extraordinary, various Museums across U.S.A and one in Israel, Curate By Barbara J. Bloemink, 2009
Holland Paper Biennial, Museum Rijswijk, Holland, 2008
• CODA Museum, Apeldoorn, Holland, 2008
Outside In: A New Focus on Taiwanese Art, Columbia University and TECO, Taipei Cultural Center, 2008
Text Messaging, Islip Museum of Art, New York, 2008
Second Lives: remixing the ordinary, Museum of Arts and Design, New York, 2008
Pulp Function, Fuller Craft museum, Brockton, MA, U.S.A, 2007
Thermocline of Art-New Asian Waves, Germany, 2007
Dalai Lama Portrait Project, Dalai Lama Foundation, Travel Show – Morio Art Museum in Tokyo, Cartier Foundation in Paris and Museum in London, Taipei, Berlin, New York, LA, 2006
Extreme Materials, Memorial Art Gallery, University of Rochester, New York, 2006
Miami Art Fair, Frederieke Taylor Gallery, Florida, 2005
Do a Book: Asian Artists Summer Project 2004, Plum Blossoms Gallery, New York, NY, 2004
The Invisible Tread – Buddhist Spirit in Contemporary Art, Snug Harbor Cultural Center, New York, NY, 2003
The Gravity of the Immaterial, Total Museum of Contemporary Art, Seoul, 2002
Absolut-2001 Los Angeles International, Biennial Art Invitational, Robert Berman Gallery, Santa Monica, CA, 2001
New Minds – Artistic Creations in Motion, Taipei Fine Arts Museum, the International Artists’ Village, Planning Office, CCA, Executive Yuan, 2001
The Gravity of the Immaterial, MoCA Taipei, Taipei, 2001
Osaka Triennial 2001, the Contemporary Art Space Osaka (CASO), Osaka, 2001
Landscape on the Shelf, American Cultural Center, Taipei, 2000
Mondo Tiara, Sculpture to Wear Gallery, Santa Monica, U.S.A., 2000
San Francisco Art Fair, Robert Berman Gallery, San Francisco, CA, 2000
Volume & Form Singapore 1999, Singapore City, National Library, Singapore, 1999
Play, Paper factory-International Paper Art Festival, Cheng Chuen Cotton Paper Foundation & Cultural Affairs Department Taiwan Provincial Government, Taiwan, 1999
Vision of Pluralism – Contemporary Art in Taiwan, 1988–1999, China Art Museum, Beijing. Mountain Art Museum, Kaohsiung, 1999
New Voice: Contemporary art Dialogue Among Taipei, Hong Kong, and Shanghai, National Taiwan Arts Education Institute, Taipei, Hong Kong Art Fair, Fubon Art Foundation, Taipei, 1998
Reflection and Reconsideration 2.28 Commemorative Exhibition, Taipei Fine Arts Museum, Taipei, 1998
The Art Season of Taipei Rapid Train Station, National Art Institute, Taipei, 1998
Osaka Trienniale 1998-Sculpture, Osaka Contemporary Art Center, Osaka Gateway to Wisdom, Fubon Art Foundation, Taiwan University, Taipei, 1998
Feast of Mind, Buffet of Art, Fubon Art Foundation, Taipei, 1997
Our Deities, ISE Art Foundation, New York Personal Best, Chassie Post Gallery, Atlanta, Georgia, 1996
A Dialogue of Contemporary Sculpture in Asia, Taipei Fine Arts Museum, Taipei, 1995• Object Orbit, Chinese-American Arts Council, New York, 1995
obCkession, TZ'art & Co., New York, 1995
Triennial der Kleinplastik 1995, Europe-Ostaien, Stuttgart, Germany, 1995
America vs China, Window Dressing, TZ'art & Co., New York, 1995
New York Area MFA Exhibition, Hunter College, Co-Sponsored by CAA, New York, 1994
The Entering Show of Taipei Fine Arts Museum Biannual, Taipei, Taiwan, 1994
Ross Chambers, Long-Bin Chen and John Lavin, SVA Gallery, New York, 1994
Taiwan Map, Window Dressing, Dimension Art Center, Taipei, 1994
Curious Structures, Visual Art Gallery, New York, 1993
Play, Work, Think, Visual Art Gallery, New York, 1993
Time Duration, Dimension Art Center, Taipei, Taiwan, 1992
Selling Specialty, Go Go Gallery, Taipei, Taiwan, 1992
Can Art Be Heritable? Space 2 Gallery, Taipei, Taiwan, 1992
The 5th International Print Biennial of Taiwan, Taipei Fine Arts Museum, Taipei, 1991
Vernacular, Space 2 Gallery, Taipei, Taiwan, 1991
Shih Hsing New Artist, Shih Hsing Gallery, Taipei, Taiwan, 1987

Awards

• Freeman Foundation Fellowship, 2003
• Grant of the Nation Endowment for Arts, Taiwan, 2001
• 1998 Grant of the Nation Endowment for Arts, Taiwan, 1998
• The Silver Prize of Osaka Triennial 1998 (sculpture), Osaka, Japan, 1998
• 1997 Grant of the Nation Endowment for Arts, Taiwan, 1997
• 1996 Grant Award of the Joan Mitchell Foundation, New York, 1996
• Visitors Price of the 6 Triennial of Small Scale Sculpture, Stuttgart, Germany, 1995
• Tung-Hai University Fine Arts Prize, Taiwan, 1988
• 12th Shih Hsing New Artist Prize, Taipei, Taiwan, 1987
• National Print Prize, Taiwan, 1985

Professional Activities

• Sacatar Residency artist, Brazil, 2006
• MassMOCA Residency artist, 2005
• Vermont Studio Center Residency artist, U.S.A., 2004
• Snug Harbor Cultural Center Residency artist, U.S.A., 2003
• 18th Street Art Complex Residency artist, U.S.A., 2000
• Lecturer of Shin-Jan University, Taipei, 1997
• Curator for Incertitude, a group show of Chinese and Taiwanese artist, Eight Floor Gallery, New York, 1996
• Curator for Under Naked, Group show of Chinese and Taiwanese artists, 465 Gallery, New York, 1994
• Program director for Space 2 Gallery, Taipei, 1991

Collections and Projects

• West Collection, Philadelphia, U.S.A., 2004
• Taiwan National Museum, Taiwan, 1999
• Osaka Culture Bureau, Japan, 1998
• Allan Chasanoff, Private Collection, New York, 1995
• Suho Paper Museum, TaipeiLibenn Aroma Inc., South Ban, Indiana, U.S.A., 1994
• Hsiung Shih Fine Art Magazine, Taipei, 1986

References

Patricia Eichebaum Karetzky"Longbin Chen: Content in Forms"Yishu, Winter 2004: 52–57

Notes and References

  1. Engel, Bonnie: [Paper, Scissors, Stone] Hong Kong Tatler
  2. http://www.frederieketaylorgallery.com/2003Apr.html "Long – Bin Chen Reading Sculpture"