d+a | Issue 125 • 2022

yao-pang wang DIRECTOR, INFORMAT DESIGN we went to the sea, and we went to the forest”—and grassroots community meetings involving village residents and Taoyuan citizens to three months of initial discussion with the various government departments. But it was the long periods of field research that really defined the curatorial team’s vision. Images of the city from a bird’s eye perspective revealed a dense urban centre surrounded by lush rainforest. hunting for ideas The team took a group of elementary students to spend two nights in the mountains on a hunting trip with indigenous Taiwanese hunters. Conversations with the leaders in the manufacturing sector led to the discovery that 41 Taoyuan was a hub for textile production. When the InFormat team encountered a spatial design challenge—they needed to extend the expo venue’s confined spaces without damaging the historical architecture—they leaned into these findings. Inspired by the city’s traditional agricultural buildings, typically crafted from roofing iron and steel poles, they built large temporary structures over the homes, yards, and laneways. These metal frames were covered in locally sourced textiles of different textures, transparencies, and hues. “The sunshine became part of our design strategy,” says Wang. The different thicknesses of the fabric allowed natural light to flood some spaces while others were cast in shadow. At night, carefully placed artificial lighting transformed the venue into a shining beacon. The curatorial team even built a miniature mock-up of the location outside their studio to research and test the lighting effects of different fabrics. Alongside the exhibition displays and other event paraphernalia, the spaces were filled with living plants local to Taoyuan, reminding visitors of the forest that existed at the borders of the city’s urban sprawl. with, for and by the community ‘Running Taoyuan’ was a far cry from the usual vast exhibition halls, white-box galleries, or booths filled with local products. The InFormat Design team recruited the expertise of a wide range of professionals to participate, create, and facilitate the displays and events: artists, local citizens, government personnel, and scientists. “The most important [part of the exhibition] was the people living in this city, that they’re telling their stories themselves,” notes Wang. One artist interviewed Taoyuan residents from various backgrounds, including Taoyuan’s substantial community of migrant workers, to collect a folio of nursery rhymes in different languages. Another took photographs of locals and printed them large on clothing worn by participants—only an eye, a hand, an ear visible. “Our target audience was everyone— from three-year-olds to 97-year-olds,” curator Wang concludes. “Everyone could enjoy this exhibition. The statements it was making weren’t confronting. You could go there just to enjoy the food. You could lie on the grass, watch the light change, and feel the wind on your skin.” informat-design.com.tw

RkJQdWJsaXNoZXIy NTU1MTYw