Yun-Fei Tou, Taiwan, ‘Public Animal Shelter’ Series, Photograph, 2013

AVAILABLE FOR SALE:

“2011/10/24 12:09 p.m. Taiwanese Public Animal Shelter, Time until Euthanized: 1.9 Hours” Photograph by Yun-Fei Tou, Taiwan, 2013

Measures approx. 4 x 5 feet. Has been exhibited unframed so may have very slight scuffs. 

Priced accordingly. 

Asking USD$600

 

 

“The greatness of a nation and its moral progress can be judged by the way its animals are treated.”  – Ghandi

Tou Yun-Fei (Taiwan), ‘2011/06/13, 11:44am, Taiwanese Public Shelter, Time until Euthanized: 40 Minutes’, 2011, Limited Edition 2/20. Photograph. Curated by LPM Projects for The Riviera.

 
 

Yun-Fei: “These images record the last moments of life for some dogs found in public shelters run by governmental agencies in Taiwan. These portraits are taken on the very day in which the animal depicted is about to be ‘put down’ or mercifully killed. These images are but a small fraction of the total body of work in this ongoing project.”

 

Born in 1975, Yun-Fei Tou first encountered the art of photography in 1991, as a student at The American School in Switzerland. In 1998, he graduated from the Rhode Island School of Design with a major in photography. In 2007 and 2008, Yun-Fei Tou received the Golden Tripod Award for Photography, presented by the Government Information Office, Executive Yuan.  In 2012, he received the grand prize of Taoyuan Creation Award.  His work has been included in a number of solo and group exhibitions held in various venues such as: Kaohsiung Fine Art Museum, Taipei Photo Center, Taiwan Photo Museum, Taiwan International Visual Art Center, National Taiwan University of Arts, and three images from this series were included in 2011 New York Photo Festival “Provocation,” a Jury Invitational Exhibition.  “MEMENTO MORI” is one of several long-term projects of Yun-Fei Tou.

 

YUN-FEI TOU: MEMENTO MORI

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2011/09/23 12:57 p.m. Taiwanese Public Animal Shelter Time until Euthanized: 1.1 Hours ©Yun-Fei Tou

Yun-Fei Tou has created a heart breaking, yet important body of work that shines a light on the euthanization of shelter dogs. He captures them in their last moments, with dignity and acknowledgement, and forces us to consider the sad endings of animals in our midst.

Yun-Fei Tou graduated from Rhode Island School of Design receiving a Bachelor of Fine Arts degree in 1998. Between 1999 and 2009, he worked as a professional photojournalist. Since 2010, he has independently pursued fine art photography while focusing on various social issues in Taiwan, where he lives. His work incorporates a variety of artistic and conceptual approaches.

MEMENTO MORI has been exhibited in many international as well as local art spaces and galleries. In 2011, MEMENTO MORI was featured in PROVOCATION, a juried,invitational exhibition held during the New York Photo Festival; in 2012, the series was awarded Grand Prize by “The 10th Taoyuan Creation Award” in Taiwan. MEMENTO MORI was recognized by PhotoShelter as being a “Notable Photography Project” in  2012. This body of work has been published in numerous news and media circles around the world including: Der Spiegel, Daily Mail, Washington Post, Los Angeles Times, Boston Herald, and the Huffington Post.

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2011/06/13 11:44 a.m. Taiwanese Public Animal Shelter Time until Euthanized: 40 Minutes ©Yun-Fei Tou

MEMENTO MORI

Utilizing the classical portrait style that artists have used throughout history, these images record the last moments of life for dogs found in public pounds run by government agencies in Taiwan. The images are taken on the actual day that each animal depicted is euthanized. Through these portraits the viewer is confronted with an irreversible past and witnesses the decay of life, moments before death. These nameless animals, by virtue of the size at, which they are printed and the approximations to human scale, are transformed into existence.

As you engage with the dog, the dog returns the scrutiny. The relationship between seeing and being seen, between the subject and object reverses and the discriminatory hierarchy is lessened. The status of power between humans and other salient beings, those considered “the other” is diminished.

The images presented in the MEMENTO MORI act as the artist’s own self-portrait whereby one can look back and in retrospect reflect upon times of confusion and despair; the pains of both spirit and body; the desire for exit and the fear of death; and witness the melancholia.

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2011/10/24 12:09 p.m. Taiwanese Public Animal Shelter Time until Euthanized: 1.9 Hours ©Yun-Fei Tou

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2011/11/28 10:54 a.m. Taiwanese Public Animal Shelter Time until Euthanized: 1.2 Hours ©Yun-Fei Tou

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2011/03/07 04:17 a.m. Taiwanese Public Animal Shelter Time until Euthanized: 13.2 Hours ©Yun-Fei Tou

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2011/08/01 11:38 a.m. Taiwanese Public Animal Shelter Time until Euthanized: 29 Minutes ©Yun-Fei Tou

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2011/09/23 12:58 p.m. Taiwanese Public Animal Shelter Time until Euthanized: 1.1 Hours ©Yun-Fei Tou

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2011/09/23 10:00 a.m. Taiwanese Public Animal Shelter Time until Euthanized: 1.4 Hours ©Yun-Fei Tou

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2012/12/10 10:35 a.m. Taiwanese Public Animal Shelter Time until Euthanized: 43 Minutes ©Yun-Fei Tou


All content on this site cannot be reproduced without linking to Lenscratch and without the permission of the photographer.

 
Photographs by Tou Yun-Fei, Taipei, Taiwan.
 

The Chosen @ General Assembly 2017

PRESS RELEASE:

Collaborative Space & Rental Venue

Established by Sothea Kham & Bruno Souliere 

 

The Chosen 

Curated by Guy Berube (LPM Projects)

& Brendan de Montigny (PDA Projects)

Reception: Friday, September 01, 2017 / 7-11pm

Duration: Sept 01 – to be announced

Video installation by Vincent Tiley (New York, USA)

Sponsored by Top Shelf Distillers (Perth, Canada)

http://topshelfdistillers.com

~~

” At times, it is no longer necessary for street-smart or academic verbal discourse to explain the purpose of what we do.

Maybe it is best, at these times, to return to basics, & that which made the business of art so captivating & gut wrenchingly enthralling.

With that, we return to straight forward ideas, bold projects, hidden gems & even bigger risks”.

– Guy Berube, director & curator, LPM Projects.

 

~~ 
 
 

The Chosen


The Chosen is the title for the inaugural art event at General Assembly.

This one-of-a-kind event is co-curated by LPM Projects & PDA Projects.

 “Yes, these artist have been chosen, but why? Is there a way to really bring together eight artists cohesively when they all express different experiences through an array of materials and methods? Maybe there is a way where academic chops can be extraneously pulled out to consider contemporary Canadian (or International) ways of thinking about being chosen. But these are meanderings that will fill our heads with more convoluted ways to explain experiences. Simply, we didn’t have a choice in being here (being alive), but we chose to be creative. I think that’s pretty neat and a good enough reason”.  – written by Brendan A. de Montigny, PDA Projects

 

Creators:

Dayna Danger (Montreal, Quebec) 

Tou Yun-Fei (Taipei, Taiwan)

Scooter LaForge (New York, USA)

Rowan Corkill (London, England) 

Peter Shmelzer (Ottawa, Canada) 

Vincent Tiley (New York, USA) 

Juan Carlos Noria (Barcelona, Spain)

Pierre Lachance (Montreal, Canada) 

 
Contact :

Inquiries / Space Rental / Private Events: info@generalassemblystudio.com
Art Sales: Guy Berube  guy@guyberube.com  By Appointment Please.

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