Questions to heaven = 天问.

Questions to Heaven is an installation that takes its name from the poem of the same name, attributed to Qu Yuan who lived during the Warring States Period of ancient China. The poem, consisting of 172 questions in total, revolves around mysteries and contradictory accounts in legends and mytholo...

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Main Author: Leow, Hou Teng.
Other Authors: School of Art, Design and Media
Format: Final Year Project
Language:English
Published: 2013
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Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10356/52434
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-524342019-12-10T11:37:54Z Questions to heaven = 天问. Leow, Hou Teng. School of Art, Design and Media Nanci Takeyama DRNTU::Visual arts and music::Visual arts DRNTU::Humanities::Religions::Taoism Questions to Heaven is an installation that takes its name from the poem of the same name, attributed to Qu Yuan who lived during the Warring States Period of ancient China. The poem, consisting of 172 questions in total, revolves around mysteries and contradictory accounts in legends and mythologies and begins with questions concerning the parts and motions of the celestial Heaven, to questions about the wonders of earth and the life it supports and finally to the realm of mortal men, his destinies and fate. Separated into three tiers, Heaven, Earth and men from the highest to the lowest tier, 76 of the original questions were included together with four questions by the artist. These were carved on ancestor tablets by the artist’s father, the artist himself, and a machine, to mediate a conversation between the three generations and to highlight the lost of a traditional skill and the wisdom attached to it through the generations. Ancestor worshiping is a common religious Daoism practice that is based on the belief that deceased family members have a continued existence in an afterlife and watches over the affairs of the family. The ancestor tablet serves more than just a record of the ancestor’s name, birth and death date but also represents the spiritual presence of the deceased, an idol of worship for their descendants. These are normally placed in ancestral halls, bearing only the family surname. Thus it performs a non-religious function, i.e., to cultivate kinship values like filial piety, family loyalty and continuity of the family lineage. This can be observed by the form of the tablet itself, its phallic symbolism as a strong reinforcement of the idea of generations of offspring. From a philosophical point of view, it acts as an axis mundi, the central line of communication from Earth to Heaven, a conversation between men and god, the descendant and the ancestor with words carved or non-carved on the tablet itself. With the traditional carving skill increasingly becoming obsolete in today’s society, will technology eventually replace the ancestor tablet carver with no one, not even the son, willing to succeed his skill? Will the artist be filled with guilt? Can the machine match the finesse and quality of a carver, and will the mass-produced work still be able to convey the same message that it used to uphold. What will become of our coming generations if the skill and its wisdom are lost? Bachelor of Fine Arts 2013-05-09T01:52:46Z 2013-05-09T01:52:46Z 2013 2013 Final Year Project (FYP) http://hdl.handle.net/10356/52434 en Nanyang Technological University 36 p. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
country Singapore
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic DRNTU::Visual arts and music::Visual arts
DRNTU::Humanities::Religions::Taoism
spellingShingle DRNTU::Visual arts and music::Visual arts
DRNTU::Humanities::Religions::Taoism
Leow, Hou Teng.
Questions to heaven = 天问.
description Questions to Heaven is an installation that takes its name from the poem of the same name, attributed to Qu Yuan who lived during the Warring States Period of ancient China. The poem, consisting of 172 questions in total, revolves around mysteries and contradictory accounts in legends and mythologies and begins with questions concerning the parts and motions of the celestial Heaven, to questions about the wonders of earth and the life it supports and finally to the realm of mortal men, his destinies and fate. Separated into three tiers, Heaven, Earth and men from the highest to the lowest tier, 76 of the original questions were included together with four questions by the artist. These were carved on ancestor tablets by the artist’s father, the artist himself, and a machine, to mediate a conversation between the three generations and to highlight the lost of a traditional skill and the wisdom attached to it through the generations. Ancestor worshiping is a common religious Daoism practice that is based on the belief that deceased family members have a continued existence in an afterlife and watches over the affairs of the family. The ancestor tablet serves more than just a record of the ancestor’s name, birth and death date but also represents the spiritual presence of the deceased, an idol of worship for their descendants. These are normally placed in ancestral halls, bearing only the family surname. Thus it performs a non-religious function, i.e., to cultivate kinship values like filial piety, family loyalty and continuity of the family lineage. This can be observed by the form of the tablet itself, its phallic symbolism as a strong reinforcement of the idea of generations of offspring. From a philosophical point of view, it acts as an axis mundi, the central line of communication from Earth to Heaven, a conversation between men and god, the descendant and the ancestor with words carved or non-carved on the tablet itself. With the traditional carving skill increasingly becoming obsolete in today’s society, will technology eventually replace the ancestor tablet carver with no one, not even the son, willing to succeed his skill? Will the artist be filled with guilt? Can the machine match the finesse and quality of a carver, and will the mass-produced work still be able to convey the same message that it used to uphold. What will become of our coming generations if the skill and its wisdom are lost?
author2 School of Art, Design and Media
author_facet School of Art, Design and Media
Leow, Hou Teng.
format Final Year Project
author Leow, Hou Teng.
author_sort Leow, Hou Teng.
title Questions to heaven = 天问.
title_short Questions to heaven = 天问.
title_full Questions to heaven = 天问.
title_fullStr Questions to heaven = 天问.
title_full_unstemmed Questions to heaven = 天问.
title_sort questions to heaven = 天问.
publishDate 2013
url http://hdl.handle.net/10356/52434
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