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​No Country for Canine

 

Starting in the 19th century, due to the liberation of animal power after the Industrial Revolution, dogs were raised for play and company rather than for labor as the primary function, making the demand for appearance gradually parallel to and even surpass that for performance in breed standardization. Meanwhile, the pursuit of singularity in terms of breed led to an attentiveness toward blood and symbolism of names and eventually came to partly conform with scientific and political thought at that time.


Similarly, the pottery and ceramic industry was deeply affected by the Industrial Revolution. The demand for ceramic for ordinary use was met thanks to the matured molding technique enabling mass pottery and ceramic production in the mid-18th century. Meanwhile, decorative ceramics began to penetrate the life of general populace, being no longer luxury craft objects dedicated to the upper class. In my view, these ceramic decorations mass produced through molding and considered rather kitsch today possess a logic echoing that of pedigree dogs being propagated and certified according to the standard criteria.

 

Whether in propagation or reproduction, artificial shaping is involved. It can be assumed that our attitude toward dogs, the kind of animal that is closest to man, is extended from our will to civilization. Dog breeds, human races: there have been several historical moments when dog and national identity came to intersect intentionally or unintentionally. Empathy toward dog breeding seemed to alleviate the impertinence of conditioning nations with human races. No Country for Canine (the Chinese title “馴國” literally means “Domestication of nations”) is like a session of ring toss: putting aside the animal that cannot make a voice (dog), artificial object (ceramic) shaped after them and the history of producer (man) in an attempt to land the ring around the tiny peg situated at the intersection of the three.

EXHIBITION GUIDE (pdf)

 
 
 
 
 
NCfC_Portrait

 
Portrait (36p)
Inkjet print
59.4×42 cm
2017-2018

 

 
 

Kaohsiung, Taiwan, 1980s.

NCfC_FFD

Formation Deformation Dogformation

Pencil on paper, inkjet print, found DDR Katzhütte (Hertwig & Co) porcelain, white porcelain

Total length 1980 cm

2018-2019 

 

Formation Deformation Dogformation

Pencil on Paper

84×59.4 cm; 126×59.4 cm

2018-2019

 
 
 

K-9 training, Taiwan, 1980.

NCfC_WW

 

Whitest White

Pencil on paper, found Allach porcelain Nr.76, vintage Japanese magazine, writing, gold light

Installation size

2019

 

Found the writing at EXHIBITION GUIDE (pdf)

 
 
NCfC_PB

 

Pure Breed  - GSD, (DDR)GSD, VEO, WSSD

Pencil on paper

84.1 × 56.4 cm, a set of 4 pieces

2017

 

 
 
NCfC_GASS

 

Grafrath: A Schäferhund Story

Single channel HD

8 mins 

2018 

 

NCfC_ACC

 

A Craftwork Canine

Single channel HD

9 mins

2019

 

 
NCfC_TW

When Collecting Becomes Breeding - Taiwan

Found Taiwanese porcelain, inkjet print

Installation size 

2012-2019​

 
 
NCfC_Temple

 

Temple of Dog Spirit

Inkjet print

30×37.5 cm

2015​

 

Jabu, a Taiwanese Shepherd Dog.

NCfC_Tag

 

Slacks Special, NO IRONING CHINA, NO IRONING ROC

Inkjet print

148×104 cm

2019

 

 
 
NCfC_EU

 

When Collecting Becomes Breeding - Europe

Found European porcelain, document

Installation size

2018-2019​

 

 
 

Germany, 1935.

NCfC_List

Those Officially Called As, Commonly Known As (Or Not Being Called As), Used For (Or Not Used For) Guarding, Herding Or Driving Livestock—Sheep, Goat, Cattle, Reindeer, Alpaca; Registered (Or Not Registered) With The FCI, Only Recognized (Or Not Recognized) By Local Kennel Clubs; Ever-Exist, Rare, Extinct Or Modern-Mixed Pasture Dog Breeds, Their Nationality And Appellation Written In The Language Of The Country, And Their Geographic Origin, Possible Consanguinity And Naming History

Print

29.7×42 cm, a set of  27 pieces

2019

PDF


Domestication 001
Pencil on paper 
29.7×21 cm
2009
 

NCfC_DOM

Domestication of Nations - Canaan Dog (Bedouin Sheepdog), Georgian Shepherd, Catalan Sheepdog 

​Pencil on paper, air-dry clay

Drawing 42×59.4 cm; sculpture 24×12×14 cm, 24×13.5×14 cm, 25×15×14.5 cm

2019

 

 
 
NCfC_Drawing

 

Glaze/Hair;Little Crack

Pencil on paer​

61.8×48.5 cm, 28.5×21 cm, 31.5×24 cm;30.5×26.8 cm

2019

 

NCfC_Scrabble

 

B_EEDS, N_TION, ETHNI_, R_GION

Brass

Installation, a set of 20 pieces

2019

 

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