Body and communication : the ‘ordinary’ art of Tang Da Wu

What might the contemporary performing body look like when it seeks to communicate and to cultivate the need to live well within the natural environment, whether the context of that living well is framed and set upon either by long-standing cultural traditions or by diverse modernizing forces over t...

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Main Author: Wee, C. J. Wan-Ling
Other Authors: School of Humanities
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: 2020
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/144518
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1445182023-03-11T20:06:26Z Body and communication : the ‘ordinary’ art of Tang Da Wu Wee, C. J. Wan-Ling School of Humanities Humanities::General Visual arts and music::Performing arts Contemporary Art Singapore What might the contemporary performing body look like when it seeks to communicate and to cultivate the need to live well within the natural environment, whether the context of that living well is framed and set upon either by long-standing cultural traditions or by diverse modernizing forces over time? The Singapore performance and visual artist Tang Da Wu has engaged with a present and a region fractured by the predations of unacceptable cultural norms – the consequences of colonial modernity or the modern nation state taking on imperial pretensions – and the subsumption of Singapore society under capitalist modernization. Tang's performing body both refuses the diminution of time to the present, as is the wont of the forces he engages with, and undertakes interventions by sometimes elusive and ironic means – unlike some overdetermined contemporary performance art – that reject the image of the modernist ‘artist as hero’. Part of the cause for this distinctive art committed to historicity and a deliberate ordinariness is that artistic communication to him means provoking self-reflexive thought rather than immediate action. Over the years this has resulted in collaborative artistic workshops, in which he has imaginatively transferred art making from his body to the realm of ordinary people. These workshops become his particular extension of the neo-avant-garde's breaching of art's infrastructures. Accepted version 2020-11-10T08:51:56Z 2020-11-10T08:51:56Z 2018 Journal Article Wee, C. J. W.-L. (2018). Body and communication : the ‘ordinary’ art of Tang Da Wu. Theatre Research International, 42(3), 286-306. doi:10.1017/S0307883317000591 0307-8833 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/144518 10.1017/S0307883317000591 3 42 286 306 en Theatre Research International © 2018 International Federation for Theatre Research. All rights reserved. This paper was published by Cambridge University Press in Theatre Research International and is made available with permission of International Federation for Theatre Research. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Humanities::General
Visual arts and music::Performing arts
Contemporary Art
Singapore
spellingShingle Humanities::General
Visual arts and music::Performing arts
Contemporary Art
Singapore
Wee, C. J. Wan-Ling
Body and communication : the ‘ordinary’ art of Tang Da Wu
description What might the contemporary performing body look like when it seeks to communicate and to cultivate the need to live well within the natural environment, whether the context of that living well is framed and set upon either by long-standing cultural traditions or by diverse modernizing forces over time? The Singapore performance and visual artist Tang Da Wu has engaged with a present and a region fractured by the predations of unacceptable cultural norms – the consequences of colonial modernity or the modern nation state taking on imperial pretensions – and the subsumption of Singapore society under capitalist modernization. Tang's performing body both refuses the diminution of time to the present, as is the wont of the forces he engages with, and undertakes interventions by sometimes elusive and ironic means – unlike some overdetermined contemporary performance art – that reject the image of the modernist ‘artist as hero’. Part of the cause for this distinctive art committed to historicity and a deliberate ordinariness is that artistic communication to him means provoking self-reflexive thought rather than immediate action. Over the years this has resulted in collaborative artistic workshops, in which he has imaginatively transferred art making from his body to the realm of ordinary people. These workshops become his particular extension of the neo-avant-garde's breaching of art's infrastructures.
author2 School of Humanities
author_facet School of Humanities
Wee, C. J. Wan-Ling
format Article
author Wee, C. J. Wan-Ling
author_sort Wee, C. J. Wan-Ling
title Body and communication : the ‘ordinary’ art of Tang Da Wu
title_short Body and communication : the ‘ordinary’ art of Tang Da Wu
title_full Body and communication : the ‘ordinary’ art of Tang Da Wu
title_fullStr Body and communication : the ‘ordinary’ art of Tang Da Wu
title_full_unstemmed Body and communication : the ‘ordinary’ art of Tang Da Wu
title_sort body and communication : the ‘ordinary’ art of tang da wu
publishDate 2020
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/144518
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