<p><ahref="/polis">Phantas.ma/polis</a>, is the new location for the video art programme of the biennial, “Looking Back to the Future”. Using the time-based annotation, timeline views and edit features of <ahref="https://pad.ma">Pad.ma</a>, <ahref="/polis">Phantas.ma/polis</a> showcases the participating artists’ videos along with extended commentaries by the curator, artists and critics. Over the duration of the biennial,
<ahref="/polis">Phantas.ma/polis</a> will evolve to bring the artworks in conversation with each other through both formal and interpretative recombinations of the featured works.</p>
<p>The title <em>Phantasmapolis</em> is a newly coined Greek word comprising “phantasma” (phantom) and “polis” (city-state) inspired by <em>Phantasmagoria</em>, an English sci-fi novel by architect Wang Dahong. Treating “Asian futurisms” as its main theme, the <strong>2021 Asian Art Biennial</strong><em>“Phantasmapolis”</em> seeks to review Asia’s past and present from the perspective of science fiction.</p>
<p>Curated by Anushka Rajendran, “Phantasmapolis: Looking back to the future” considers alterities and futurisms whose traces endure in our present—often inherited from the past—that were denied existence, or threatened by various dominant apparatuses of power. A series of moving image works articulate their concerns in the grammatical premise determined by the future-past tense, excavating the cyclical nature of time and latencies residing in the interstices of time as experienced in the contemporary.</p>
<p>The artworks present in this exhibition, even as they maintain scepticism towards techno-fetishistic, development-philic, heteronormative, non-inclusive paradigms for the future, propelled in the interest of capital and by the anaemic premise inscribed by the idea of progress, they do not deny the possibility of reorienting civilizational creativity and resilience towards reconsiderations.</p>
<p>The online platform that hosts this exhibition conceptualized and drawn from <ahref="https://pad.ma">Pad.ma</a> proposes alternative ways of deepening the connectivity and democratic possibilities that can exist vis-à-vis the internet towards ethical digital infrastructures to engage intimately with art.</p>
<p><ahref="/polis">Phantas.ma/polis</a> 為本屆亞洲藝術雙年展的錄像藝術單元「回望未來」(Looking Back to the Future)的專屬網站,其時基注釋、時間軸、剪輯等特色,於線上呈現參展藝術家的錄像作品,並搭配策展人、藝術家、藝評家的深度評論和活潑精彩的每日節目規畫。雙年展期間,<ahref="/polis">Phantas.ma/polis</a> 將會持續演化,藉由將展出作品在形式上和詮釋面上的重新組合,讓作品間產生對話。</p>
<p><strong>Anushka Rajendran</strong> is a curator and art writer based in New Delhi. She is the curator for the Prameya Art Foundation (PRAF), a non-profit arts organization based in New Delhi committed to approaches that enable audience-thinking for contemporary art in India. She is also the Festival Curator of the 2021 edition of Colomboscope and was assistant curator for Kochi-Muziris Biennale 2018. As a research scholar, Anushka is completing her PhD in Visual Studies at the School of Arts and Aesthetics, Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi. Her research traces how the notion of ‘public’ has acquired alternative significance to contemporary Indian art. Her previous MPhil research focused on the adoption of installation art by artists in India in the early 1990s to address collective and personal trauma. For her curatorial practice, she has been awarded fellowships that supported residencies with Fundación Sandretto Re Rebaudengo Madrid; Aomori Contemporary Art Center, Aomori, Japan; the International Studio & Curatorial Program (ISCP), New York (by Inlaks Shivdasani Foundation); and Theertha International Artists’ Collective, Colombo.</p>
<p><ahref="https://pad.ma"><strong>Pad.ma</strong></a> is an artist-run online archive of densely text-annotated video material, primarily footage and not finished films contributed by filmmakers, artists and cultural workers. It was set up in 2008 as a collaboration between CAMP, 0x2620, the Alternative Law Forum and Majlis. Pad.ma (and her allied projects) remain at the forefront of radical and future-oriented thinking and engagement with both material and theory of digital archives.</p>
<p><ahref="https://studio.camp"><strong>CAMP</strong></a> is a collaborative studio founded in Bombay in 2007. It has been producing fundamental new work in film and video, electronic media, and public art forms, in a practice characterised by a hand-dirtying, non-alienated relation to technology. From their home base in Mumbai, they co-host the online archives <ahref="https://pad.ma">Pad.ma</a> and <ahref="https://indiancine.ma">indiancine.ma</a> and run a rooftop cinema for the past 14 years.</p>
<p>Founded in 2010 in Berlin, <ahref="https://0x2620.org"><strong>0x2620</strong></a> is an artist-run agency for the advancement of the international exchange of information, and usually operates at the intersections of art, politics and technology. Its activities include extensive research on intellectual property and piracy, the development of open-source software tools and web applications, and the production of both technological and social infrastructure for the collaborative creation, maintenance and use of relatively large data sets.</p>
<p><ahref="https://pad.ma"><strong>Pad.ma</strong></a> 公眾存取數位媒體檔案庫(Public Access Digital Media Archive ,簡稱Pad.ma)是一個為密集文字標注影片素材所設立的線上檔案庫。其營運團隊成員皆為藝術家,彙整內容主要為電影創作者、藝術家、文化工作者提供的影片資料帶和未完成的影片。2008年正式上線的Pad.ma為CAMP、0x2620、另類法律論壇、Majlis共同合作而成。Pad.ma(與其他相關計畫)激進、以未來為導向的思考模式多年來始終如一,並積極投入數位檔案的素材與理論的研究。
<p><strong>Yang Yu-Chiao</strong> is a researcher on oral literature, narratology and folktale poetics, and is also a narrator of Taiwanese folktales in the oral tradition. Yu-Chiao also created several performances drawing from storytelling, poetry, writing actions, and experimental sounds with artists working with different media including digital, film, and classical music since 2017. Yu-Chiao has published several works including a series of tales that demonstrate characters in oracle bone script.</p>
<p><strong>Chen Wan-Yin</strong> is an art critic and a writer. She is currently a Ph.D. researcher on media aesthetics and East Asian contemporary art at Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam. She previously worked as an editor of Artist Magazine (Taipei) from 2014 to 2017 and since 2015, she has also been working as a scriptwriter with video artist Hsu Che-Yu.</p>
<p>The video art programme of the <ahref="https://www.asianartbiennial.org/2021en/">Asian Art Biennial</a> is organized by National Taiwan Museum of Fine Arts, supervised by the Ministry of Culture, and is co-organized by the Cultural Taiwan Foundation and in partnership with SEA Plateau.</p>