taipei-biennal

14th Taipei Biennial: Whispers on the Horizon

Exploring Yearning as Unyielding Drive with 72 Artists From Across the Globe

The 14th edition of the Taipei Biennial, Whispers on the Horizon, in now on view at the Taipei Fine Arts Museum (TFAM). Curated by Sam Bardaouil and Till Fellrath (Directors of Hamburger Bahnhof – Nationalgalerie der Gegenwart, Berlin), the exhibition brings together around 150 works by 72 artists from 37 cities. The presentation includes 34 new commissions and site-specific installations, spanning painting, sculpture, film, photography, and performance.

Whispers on the Horizon explores yearning as an enduring human drive that reaches past the possible, knowing it will never hold, and still refuses to yield. It is both personal and collective, fragile and defiant; the thread that connects longing to imagination and change. The exhibition expresses a desire to speak about the future in a tone of quiet insistence rather than overt proclamation. “Whispers” evokes the fragility of communication—voices that endure even in silence, stories that persist despite erasure. The “Horizon” marks the meeting line between what is known and what is hoped for. Together, they suggest that the faintest murmur can redraw distance, and the smallest gesture can reshape how we imagine the world.

The conceptual foundation of this edition draws from three modest yet charged objects—though absent from the physical exhibition, they serve as metaphors guiding the show’s emotional and temporal arc. The puppet of Li Tien-Lu, featured in Hou Hsiao-Hsien’s film The Puppetmaster (1993), represents a life dedicated to craft, embodying persistence across periods of occupation and renewal; the diary from Chen Yingzhen’s short story My Kid Brother Kangxiong (1960) conveys the voice of a young man who took his own life, torn between faith and despair, reflecting a generation caught between conviction and disillusion; the bicycle from Wu Ming-Yi’s novel The Stolen Bicycle (2015) symbolizes a son’s search for his missing father, evoking themes of loss, inheritance, and belonging. Together, these literary and cinematic references form an invisible architecture for the Biennial, with the puppet representing continuity, the diary interiority, and the bicycle pursuit—three distinct expressions of yearning that resonate throughout the exhibition.

The Biennial interweaves contemporary works with ones from the Taipei Fine Arts Museum’s collection. Around 30 TFAM collection pieces are placed throughout the exhibition in dialogue with both new commissions and existing works. A broad selection of photographs from the 1930s–80s forms a subtle thread running through the Biennial, echoing its three conceptual departure points: the puppet, the diary, and the bicycle. Additional pieces appear in formal or thematic resonance with individual artworks across the exhibition. They act not merely as historical artifacts but as living agents of yearning that bridge continuity and transformation. This curatorial approach fosters an intergenerational dialogue between those who shaped Taiwan’s cultural landscape and those addressing today’s urgency.

The exhibition architecture, specially conceived for this edition, features textile partitions in place of solid walls. These suspended elements function as permeable thresholds, arranged to allow sightlines between galleries and create a rhythm of visibility and connection. This spatial strategy echoes the thematic undercurrents of the Biennial, inviting a fluid and contemplative visitor experience. In addition, concise wall texts function as a self-guided tour, offering visitors clear context for each work on display and opening accessible pathways into the ideas shaping the Biennial.

Sam Bardaouil & Till Fellrath, Curators, remark: „We want to create a Biennial that could only exist here — one that listens to the histories, languages, and contradictions that make Taipei what it is. Our dialogue with TFAM’s collection was not an act of nostalgia but of grounding: an insistence that the local, when deeply engaged, becomes a lens for the world. In Whispers on the Horizon, yearning is that bridge — it begins in the intimacy of memory and extends into a shared horizon where the local turns universal.“

1 November 2025 – 29 March 2026

TAIPEI FINE ARTS MUSEUM
No. 181, Sec. 3, Zhongshan N. Rd., Zhongshan Dist.,
Taipei City 10461, Taiwan, R.O.C

https://www.taipeibiennial.org

Text: (c) Taipei Biennal

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