《萬花筒》為澳洲藝術家 Chris Worfold 個展,展出其於2015年至2026年間完成的油畫、素描版作品,內容涵蓋台灣重要私人收藏,亦包含為本次展覽特別創作的新作。藝術家長期關注類比畫與數位影像之間的交會,並深受榮格心理學影響,透過圖像探討感知、記憶與內在心理結。Chris Worfold 具備深厚學術背景,作品曾於多個國際城市展出,自2009年起多次來台,續與台灣藝術圈進行交流與合作,展現鮮明的跨文化視野。
Kaleidoscope, a solo exhibition by Chris Worfold is presented at the
Kaohsiung Cultural Centre, JHIH JING Gallery 2 from March 20 to 31, with
the official opening on March 21 at 2.30pm. The exhibition presents paintings,
drawings, and prints made from 2014 to 2026 and combines significant works
drawn from private collections in Taiwan with new works made specifically for
this exhibition.
Biography
Chris Worfold is an Australian, Visual Artist. Born in Brisbane in 1972. He is
an alumni of the Queensland College of Art, Griffith University and
Queensland University of Technology - BVA, Grad Dip Ed, BA(Hons), PhD -
and was a Senior lecturer at the University of Canberra / TAFE QLD.
His research and practice have investigated the confluence of analogue
painting and digital imaging and he has conducted extensive inquiry into the
psychoanalytic theories of C.G.Jung. He has travelled widely and has
exhibited internationally in Taipei, Seoul, Paris, and New York.
Chris has visited Taiwan on numerous occasions since he first toured the
county in 2009 and in collaboration with ShowArts he has exhibited at Art
Taipei and various cross-cultural exchange exhibitions in Taiwan since 2015.
Kaleidoscope
A kaleidoscope is a children’s toy or novelty device. Viewed through one eye
like a telescope, it presents us with a fractured pattern of light. Inside, it has
two or more angled mirrors that reflect loose coloured objects that form
endless, symmetrical, two dimensional patterns when reflected on the lens.
The exhibition is titled Kaleidoscope metaphorically because of the idea that
eastern and western cultures can mix together and reflect one another to
create wonderful new and harmonious patterns. Also, much like a
kaleidoscope, Chris’s work often repeats and reuses images in iterative ways.
Here flowers, wings and landscapes are combined and recombined in new
paintings, drawings, and prints. The flowers are symbols of growth, the wings
represent freedom and transcendence, and the landscapes map physical and
mental space. You can see that some of the works completed this year
contain the same motifs as works that were completed a decade ago, like a
kaleidoscopic dream they present us with surreal variations of forms.
As adults when we look through a kaleidoscope we are generally mildly
amused and then we put it back down, but as children many of us were
fascinated by it, holding it up to our eye time and time again and sharing it
with others in awe. You are invited to look at the works in this exhibition with
this same child’s eye, not seeking fixed meaning but exploring and sharing in
wonder instead.