Making Worlds: An Imagineering Project
In 1955, Walt Disney founded the world’s very first modern theme park Disneyland. A theme park, by definition, is an amusement park where space design, foot traffic flow, mise-en-scènes, audiovisual experiences, characters, and activities all revolve around one, or several, themes or stories. This stylized scenery is the result of a transdisciplinary spatial narrative that serves a particular purpose: conjuring an immersive fantastic environment for each visitor, where, much like a parallel universe, all connections between this land of fantasy and the real world dissolve, and relationships are reconfigured.
The template of theme parks has grown to include myriad versions that cross over to different industries and increasingly expand, riding the waves of globalized replicate culture, ubiquitous digital immersive experience, and the growth of entertainment labor force. Often a highly commercialized and monitored space, a theme park tends to self-replicate and enjoys universal popularity. It comes with theme restaurants, hotels, or shopping malls. It also comes in the form of a historic site or a museum. The careful crafting of a theme park’s atmosphere involves scripted events, visitor experience management, and visitor behavior analysis.
Perhaps we can say that a themed environment allows visitors to collectively enter another world of thought constructed by others, allowing us to live various fairytales. Akin less to infrastructure construction than ideology construction, this themed environment substitutes the dreadful and troublesome public domain with the highly regulated, pleasurable domain. This group exhibition pictures the participating artists as imagineers who take on creative engineering projects. The aim is to reveal the system and mechanisms behind engineering, but for the purpose of imagination. Chang Wen-Hsuan reflects on the political operations behind nonverbal narrative techniques, while Lindsay Seers evades linearity by creating elliptical narratives, each riven into an ocean of fortuitous events that interrelate. Kosta Tonev explores the commodification and degeographization of people, events, goods, time, and place in the system, while Ericka Beckman through game mechanics uncovers the system in which society functions and looks for potential breaches. The operations of a theme park, however, still echo the psychological needs and desires of humanity. Chang Yun-Han probes humanity’s eternal longings and dreams for a neverland, while Joyce Ho treads the fine line between the mundane and the human desire for the fantastic, offering a glimpse into the nuanced sensations of the body and mind. Upon entering, the viewer is invited to experience this wonderland and its ceaseless wonders.
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In 1955, Walt Disney founded the world’s very first modern theme park Disneyland. A theme park, by definition, is an amusement park where space design, foot traffic flow, mise-en-scènes, audiovisual experiences, characters, and activities all revolve around one, or several, themes or stories. This stylized scenery is the result of a transdisciplinary spatial narrative that serves a particular purpose: conjuring an immersive fantastic environment for each visitor, where, much like a parallel universe, all connections between this land of fantasy and the real world dissolve, and relationships are reconfigured.
The template of theme parks has grown to include myriad versions that cross over to different industries and increasingly expand, riding the waves of globalized replicate culture, ubiquitous digital immersive experience, and the growth of entertainment labor force. Often a highly commercialized and monitored space, a theme park tends to self-replicate and enjoys universal popularity. It comes with theme restaurants, hotels, or shopping malls. It also comes in the form of a historic site or a museum. The careful crafting of a theme park’s atmosphere involves scripted events, visitor experience management, and visitor behavior analysis.
Perhaps we can say that a themed environment allows visitors to collectively enter another world of thought constructed by others, allowing us to live various fairytales. Akin less to infrastructure construction than ideology construction, this themed environment substitutes the dreadful and troublesome public domain with the highly regulated, pleasurable domain. This group exhibition pictures the participating artists as imagineers who take on creative engineering projects. The aim is to reveal the system and mechanisms behind engineering, but for the purpose of imagination. Chang Wen-Hsuan reflects on the political operations behind nonverbal narrative techniques, while Lindsay Seers evades linearity by creating elliptical narratives, each riven into an ocean of fortuitous events that interrelate. Kosta Tonev explores the commodification and degeographization of people, events, goods, time, and place in the system, while Ericka Beckman through game mechanics uncovers the system in which society functions and looks for potential breaches. The operations of a theme park, however, still echo the psychological needs and desires of humanity. Chang Yun-Han probes humanity’s eternal longings and dreams for a neverland, while Joyce Ho treads the fine line between the mundane and the human desire for the fantastic, offering a glimpse into the nuanced sensations of the body and mind. Upon entering, the viewer is invited to experience this wonderland and its ceaseless wonders.
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