Recent Posts
INTER MISSION "LIFE CIRCUIT"
Reflection:
In this work, a person wears a head piece device that is attached to other devices on his arms etc. He the proceeds to navigates around the space of the museum and the audience. As he he do so, his head gear constantly changes live visuals into sounds. This causes him to be very disoriented and confused, bumping to a Read more →
INTER-MISSION , Disappearance, Bar in the Gallery
INTER-MISSION Disappearance, Bar in the Gallery is a performance of Life Circuit by Urich Lau and Teow Yue Han in a setting of seems like a Korean bar in 1943. Life Circuit is an ongoing performative project exploring how video art, music and performance and be weaved together. The overall bar setting is a recreation inspired by Lee Kang-so’s Disappearance, Bar Read more →
Research : INTER—MISSION
INTER—MISSION is an art collective dedicated to discourses of technology in art initiated in 2016 by Urich LAU and TEOW Yue Han. Focusing on interdisciplinary and collaborative works in video art, audiovisual, performance, installation and interactive art. The collective aims to inhabit the gap between technologically engaged artworks, artists and audiences.
INTER—MISSION builds transnational networks to promote sustained dialogue and Read more →
LIFE CIRCUIT — INTER—MISSION
1. SPACE
Physical Space
The set up of the Disappearance Bar at National Gallery is based on Lee Kang So’s work, ‘Disappearance, bar in the Gallery’ which involved incorporating wooden chairs and tables from the bars he frequented within a gallery space where viewers could have momentary and temporal interactions just like people do over casual drinks at bars. The Read more →
Life Circuit By Urich Lau and Teow Yue Han - Disappearance, Bar in the Gallery -INTER-MISSION-
Initial thoughts of the installation:
Entering the space where the exhibition was taking place, I was greeted with the sight of what I thought was coffee tables, with the audience occupying the seats and due to the limited seats, many viewers stood around as the live performance unfolded. I was perplexed by the setup, as I went in with little knowledge Read more →
Disappearance: Bar in the Gallery with INTER-MISSION
I caught the show on the second night, which I realised has a very different sequence of events as compared to the first show. When I first walked into the performance space, I saw that the performance was taking place within another work, Disappearance: Bar in the Gallery by Lee Kang-So, originally presented in Korea in 1973 and recreated for Read more →
INTER-MISSION interactive installation
THE LAPSE PROJECT
Singapore International Festival of Arts 2018, The Arts House Gallery
The Lapse Project imagines a world that is constituted through interfaces where places of artistic and cultural identities become editable, and can just as easily be switched on or off. The familiar monuments and landmarks of Singapore– The Arts House, National Gallery Singapore, National Museum of Singapore Read more →
Field Trip Reflection - Happenings | "Disappearance, Bar in the Gallery" with INTER— MISSION
This exhibition was a remake of Lee Kang-So’s 1970s works “Disappearance” combining with the artwork, Life Circle, I/O by Inter-Mission. The artists manipulated the sound effects according to the audience’s behavior while they projected some videos on three different screens. The small digital screen near the side showed some footage they took before in the gallery and some other places. Read more →
Y2S1 | Interactive Media 1 | INTER—MISSION Interactive Project | The Lapse Project
It was a pity that I could not make it for INTER—MISSION performance. I’ve heard many mixed reviews on the performance from my friends, while most said that it was a rather abstract work that was hard to understand, which I guess was probably an avant-garde one. As such, I had to research about INTER—MISSION, and to select one of Read more →
Reflection on "Disappearance, Bar in the Gallery with Inter-Mission"
This audio-visual performance by Inter-Mission reimaging Lee Kang-so’s Disappearance, Bar in the Gallery in 1973 is quite an unexpectedly chaotic experience for me. It was set up in the staircase of National Gallery Singapore. Without any preliminary knowledge, this was my impression of the performance. A “coffee shop” was strangely set up at the entrance of the performance. Thinking it was Read more →