Taishin Arts Awards
  • Date 2026.02.25

The 24th Taishin Arts Award Announces 16 Shortlisted Works

Seven Shortlisted Projects in the Visual Arts and Nine in the Performing Arts Categories Compete for Three Top Honors 

The Works Explore Geopolitics, the Interweaving of Digital Vocabularies across Disciplines, and the Inner Gaze of Individual Lives


Taiwan’s prestigious contemporary art award, the Taishin Arts Award, has announced its shortlist for the 24th edition. A selection committee of nine nominators, including WU Yi-Hua, CHOW Ling-Chih, CHIANG Fu-Chin, TSUI Kuang-Yu, CHANG Yin-Fang, CHEN Hsiang-Wen, FAN Xiang-Jun, CHENG Sheng-Hua, and Yizai Seah, observed exhibitions and performances throughout 2025, wrote reviews, conducted quarterly independent nominations, and participated in semi-final deliberations. They reviewed 108 works—nominees that agreed to participate in the selection—and selected 16 finalists. These finalists will compete for the Visual Arts Award, the Performing Arts Award (each offering NT$1 million), and the Grand Prize (NT$1.5 million). 

The 16 shortlisted works include seven in the visual arts and nine in the performing arts, covering themes such as geopolitics and ethnic identity, life paths amid colonialism and migration, labor systems within global supply chains, the anxieties and transformations of midlife crisis, the life journeys and redemption of people with disabilities, and the invocation of pioneering artists’ unfulfilled wishes through spirit mediums. Furthermore, this year’s finalists highlight interdisciplinary or transnational collaborations, the mature use of digital media, the refinement and deepening of stylized personal artistic language, and innovative sonic vocabularies in the performing arts, showcasing the critical depth and emotional power of contemporary art. 


The 24th Taishin Arts Award Shortlist (arranged by the stroke order of the Chinese titles in the visual arts and performing arts categories)  


Visual Arts

Sounds of Babel / Taiwan Contemporary Culture Lab CHUANG Wei-Tzu

The Rocking Dream: Au Sow Yee × Chen Yow-Ruu Solo Exhibition / AU Sow Yee, CHEN Yow-Ruu (Her Lab Space)

Trilogy of Culture and Technology —Featured in Reimagining Radical Cities / HUANG Sun-Quan

Psychic Theater: Hung-Chih Peng Solo Exhibition / Hung-Chih Peng

Footprints of the Walker: Tsai Ming-Liang / TSAI Ming-Liang, SING Song-Yong

Cosmic Sketches—The LuxuryLogico Exhibition / LuxuryLogico

Phantom Topographies—Chen Chao-Tung Solo Exhibition / CHEN Chao-Tung


Performing Arts

KINGDOM / CHAO Ting-Ting × Anarchy Dance Theater  

Oh! Baby 2025—2025 Taoyuan Iron Rose Festival / Body Phase Studio 

qaqay—2025 Ocean Art Fun / TAI Body Theatre 

FreeSteps-murmur—2025 Taiwan International Festival of Arts / HORSE SU Wei-Chia

Embarking on a Drift to the Unknown—National Kaohsiung Center for the Arts (Weiwuying) Kaohsiung Local Hi Project / Antinomy Company

Macbeth Does a Ritual / Body Phase Studio

Lament of the Wandering Head / Sun Son Theatre

Worn Yet Unfolding—2025 NTCH Ideas Lab / YANG Nai-Hsuan (Sunny)

Jing-Mu KUO Guzheng Recital/KUO Jing-Mu


Among the 16 shortlisted works, several focus on the awareness of marginalized groups in the context of geopolitics and economic diffusion: AU Sow Yee and CHEN Yow-Ruu’s collaboration, The Rocking Dream, and Sun Son Theatre’s Lament of the Wandering Head, draw on Southeast Asian folklore to reveal the situations and confusions faced by drifters dealing with diaspora and identity challenges under geopolitical pressures. Antimony Company’s solo piece, Embarking on a Drift to the Unknown, explores the migration of Chinese women, highlighting life paths amid colonialism and overseas movement. HUANG Sun-Quan’s Trilogy of Culture and Technology, developed over three years through interviews with more than 100 individuals, analyzes the systems of labor and technological subcontracting within global supply chains through video works. C-LAB curator CHUANG Wei-Tzu’s Sounds of Babel uses the myth of the Tower of Babel as a metaphor, shifting from macro-level national discourses to micro-level personal murmurs and prompting reflection on heterogeneous voices often overshadowed by dominant narratives in today’s society.


Facing the digital age, many artists have also reflected deeply on technology and demonstrated reconstructions of digital vocabularies and spatial logic. CHAO Ting-Ting × Anarchy Dance Theater’s KINGDOM employs VR technology and 3D space to expand the connection between body, memory, and digital environments, guiding the audience into a perceptual world that blends the virtual and the real. CHEN Chao-Tung’s Phantom Topographies deconstructs and layers reflections of objects with logical displacements, flipping our perceptions of everyday space and highlighting overlooked details in daily visual experiences. LuxuryLogico’s Cosmic Sketches, built on 15 years of creative development, combines cross-media installations with generative technologies to create a new example of integrating technology and art. TSAI Ming-Liang’s Footprints of the Walker: Tsai Ming-Liang brings together ten works completed over the past 13 years, cleverly overlapping the temporalities of video, installation, and performance art within the exhibition space, creating new meanings with each step in time’s spiral. Hung-Chih Peng’s Psychic Theater channels the legacy of avant-garde theater pioneers using mediumship, revealing the unfinished narratives of Taiwan’s experimental theater through installation, sound, video, and performance, while reflecting on the artist’s own life context within this cyclical process. 


Additionally, several works of the performing arts demonstrate powerful theatrical narratives and physical energy, drawing on insights and innovations from life experiences. Body Phase Studio is shortlisted for Macbeth Does a Ritual and Oh! Baby 2025. The former, co-created by director WANG Mo-Lin and Korean actor BAEK Dae-Hyun, uses a solo performance to respond to war and the value of existence, while the latter, directed by YAO Li-Chun with Taiwanese and Korean performers, explores identity issues and gender differences among people with disabilities, personal redemption, and cross-cultural themes. HORSE Dance Theatre’s FreeSteps-murmur is the final chapter of SU Wei-Chia’s decade-long choreography project, featuring the choreographer performing solo on stage to examine inner reflections amid struggles and the coexistence of the body and illness. YANG Nai-Hsuan’s Worn Yet Unfolding, inspired by the choreographer’s own creative work and life journey, transforms midlife anxieties into a piece of warm and empathetic resonance. TAI Body Theatre’s qaqay addresses environmental and community migrations and displacement through the use of indigenous language and physically inscribed foot scripts, creating an epic narrative of the mountain forests. KUO Jing-Mu’s Guzheng Recital, with guzheng music as a starting point, contemplates the relationship between performer, body, and sound, opening new possibilities for dialogue between traditional guzheng and contemporary theatre.


The 16 shortlisted works will advance to the final selection in late May, and the award ceremony is scheduled for May 30th to announce the three award winners. The event will be streamed live on the official website and Facebook page of the Taishin Bank Foundation for Arts and Culture, and the public is invited to join the ceremony online. To help the public gain a deeper understanding of the shortlisted works, the Foundation has organized a series of promotional activities and events from April to May, including video and media interviews, a video exhibition at the first-floor lobby of the Taishin Tower, the “Rolling Four Nights—Artists’ Salon” program, and “My Choice for the Winner” online voting. For updates on these events, please visit the Foundation’s website and Facebook page.


Website of the Taishin Bank Foundation for Arts and Culture: https://www.taishinart.org.tw/index.html 


Sounds of Babel / Taiwan Contemporary Culture Lab CHUANG Wei-Tzu

Sounds of Babel uses the myth of the Tower of Babel as a metaphorical starting point to explore the heterogeneous voices obscured by dominant discourses and offers an artistic path for reflecting on contemporary crises of language. The exhibition views language as a social practice for understanding different ways of life, using symbolic signs, sounds, and images as entry points to observe consciousness. It examines and presents the diverse soundscapes that emerged after the Tower of Babel, alongside their modern interpretations, demonstrating insightful, universal humanistic depth and artistic scope. The curator skillfully utilizes C-Lab’s spatial characteristics, with clear subthemes, varied dialogic texts, diverse media, and creatively interconnected works to achieve both scope and depth, highlighting marginalized voices at the intersection of art and social justice. (Commentator / WU Yi-Hua)
The Rocking Dream: Au Sow Yee × Chen Yow-Ruu Solo Exhibition / AU Sow Yee, CHEN Yow-Ruu (Her Lab Space)

Using the double imagery of “rocking” and “rock,” this exhibition reflects the drifting circumstances of stateless individuals caught in geopolitics. AU Sow Yee and CHEN Yow-Ruu bring narrative momentum from theater into contemporary art, ingeniously blending various forms of storytelling, including news archives, oral recordings from stateless children, miniature scenes, and musical segments. Starting with Malaysian folk legends, the exhibition immerses the audience in soundscapes interlayered with the virtual and the real, reflecting complex issues of borders and identity. In a compact gallery space rich with vocabulary, the exhibition engages the audience’s perception effectively. The two artists display a subtle concern for different states of survival and existence, even blurring the line between documentary records and artistic expression. (Commentator / CHIANG Fu-Ching) 

Trilogy of Culture and Technology—Featured in Reimagining Radical Cities / HUANG Sun-Quan

Starting in 2023, this trilogy has traced the historical context of the digital world, examining the influence of geopolitics and digital culture. It reveals the global deployment of the semiconductor industry and the system of technological subcontracting. Covering periods from the Cold War to the newer international division of labor under neoliberalism, and the myths surrounding hypermodern industries and cities, the work specifically focuses on severely exploited low-wage workers in labor-intensive industries hidden within global supply chains, often marginalized by gender, race, class, and life circumstances. It critically analyzes complex power structures and cultural formations, such as labor migration and economic-political landscapes. Addressing today’s world amid various crises, this work offers extensive insight, foresight, critical perspective, and active engagement, forming an indisputably significant epic of contemporary culture and technology. (Commentator / CHOW Ling-Chih)

Psychic Theater: Hung-Chih Peng Solo Exhibition / Hung-Chih Peng



Psychic Theater presents Hung-Chih Peng’s artistic endeavor and experimental use of mediumistic techniques. Inspired by three pioneering figures from Taiwan’s theater scene—TIEN Chi-Yuan (1964–1996), CHEN Ming-Tsai (1961–2003), and CHOU Yi-Chang (1948–2016)—the exhibition evokes “clairvoyance” that informs the installation, sound, video, and performance, challenging the perceptual boundaries of existing materials and methods while expanding the narrative and spatial dimensions of life and death, presence and absence, reality and virtuality. It transforms “unfinishedness” into a creative approach that breaks and connects different boundaries, creating an eerie yet beautiful art form that evokes awe through its unique expression. (Commentator / CHENG Sheng-Hua) 

Footprints of the Walker: Tsai Ming-Liang / TSAI Ming-Liang, SIN Song-Yong

TSAI Ming-Liang, like a pilgrim or farmer, cultivates his artistic language between detachment from and engagement with the world. Over thirteen years of dedicated commitment, he has focused on his personal motif, allowing his creative work to branch out organically without bowing to international curatorial trends, fully manifesting the obsessive creativity of an artist. Employing ritualistic language and texts imbued with a religious hue without regressing art to supernatural shamanism or borrowing jargon like “spirituality” or “fieldwork,” the exhibition displays a robust artistic vocabulary that enables the work to emanate a mana-like energy. The curator threads the project meticulously, helping the artist collate thirteen years of documents and tease out the creative context. The finishing touch is the spatial arrangement, which cleverly overlays the temporalities of the films, installations, and performance art, enabling viewers to fully perceive the spiritual path of the “walker.” (Commentator / WU Yi-Hua) 

Cosmic Sketches—The LuxuryLogico Exhibition / LuxuryLogico


Cosmic Sketches showcases LuxuryLogico’s work over the past fifteen years, including public art, participatory projects, and their individual endeavors. In this exhibition, the long-term project, Project Woodpecker, is woven into the space like roots, connecting different projects. They break down, reinterpret, and express the ethos of collective practice across both individual and group works. The largest gallery room features the main piece, 201 Space, which combines light, music, a robotic hand, and driftwood into a harmonious, unmanned theater, not only highlighting the group’s ambition to explore large-scale mechanical art but also conveying a poetic sensibility rooted in the group’s internal life experiences. (Commentator / CHEN Hsiang-Wen)

Phantom Topographies—Chen Chao-Tung Solo Exhibition / CHEN Chao-Tung


CHEN Chao-Tung deconstructs physical quadrants into multiple layers in this exhibition, overlaying them with observational errors that dissolve and reset spatial logic. This results in a realm that resembles reality but defies logic. Meanwhile, it delineates the afterimages of human perception, offset from everyday narratives, amid endless refractions between materiality and space. These spatial replicas, refracted from various objects, lead viewers through different narratives within the space. Elegant installations serve as spatial filters and reshape our perception of the world, marking the deformations and folds in the visual field while transforming lived experience into perceptual recreation. The exhibition reminds us to observe those never-questioned rules in life and explore new possibilities unveiled by sensory experiences caused by dislocations of logic across different thresholds. (Commentator / TSUI Kuang-Yu)

KINGDOM / CHAO Ting-Ting × Anarchy Dance Theater

Beyond simply demonstrating how virtual reality serves as a means to explore memory and visions of the future, KINGDOM employs 3D digital space, images from VR headsets, and the shared space between audience and performers to transport everyone into a meticulously choreographed memory space characterized by a never-ending process of compression and decompression through shifting viewpoints and the design of a seemingly infinite stage, floating in a (private) digital kingdom that is constantly collapsing and being reconstructed. This work relies heavily on the performing team’s high level of coordination, with live sound and visual effects precisely synchronized with the performers’ onstage states. Meanwhile, performers wearing headsets need to enhance their sensory engagement to respond to live audiovisual cues. This exemplifies the fruit of their longstanding collaboration. (Commentator / CHEN Hsiang-Wen) 


Oh! Baby 2025—2025 Taoyuan Iron Rose Festival / Body Phase Studio 

Over the years, Body Phase Studio has continually focused on and laid the foundation for an aesthetic rooted in a sixth sense in art, emphasizing a valuable social aspect. Guided by director YAO Lee-Chun, this work promotes theater as a space where margins and existence can freely unfold. The collaboration between the two performers impresses, evolving from “connecting aphasic bodies” to a vivid realm where desire clashes between life and death. Reversing barriers and constructing subjectivity challenge the cognitive limits imposed by normality, offering freedom within constraints to transcend boundaries and breach discipline through chaotic eros. Amid uncontrolled distortion and discord, this work explores paths to love, from glowing trajectories of light and religious breaths to isolated celebrations and confrontational silences, fostering fierce resilience and vibrant creativity to celebrate life’s hardships and cruelties. (Commentator / CHOW Ling-Chih)


qaqay—2025 Ocean Art Fun / TAI Body Theatre 


TAI Body Theatre’s foot scripts reflect contemporary youth’s encounters with environmental challenges as well as collective migratory and diasporic experiences. It is composed through the collaborative body, engaging in affirmative, sensibility-oriented thinking and land philosophy. Starting with the relationship between the indigenous language and the body, it explores sonic and spatiotemporal dialectics and imaginations rooted in historical narratives. The dancers’ feet, like those of beasts, stamp and create landscape changes and layered temporalities, forming an epic of mountains and forests that convey memories of ancestral spirits and of returning to nature, along with the sorrows therein. Within the consoling power of music and dance, they weave hope and the regenerative forces of life. With heartfelt spiritual depth, this work confronts the challenge of disappearance through dynamic tensions and channels the sounds of all beings and past existences into our bodies, achieving the return of the impossible. (Commentator / CHOW Ling-Chih)


FreeSteps-murmur—2025 Taiwan International Festival of Arts / HORSE SU Wei-Chia

FreeSteps-murmur, as the final chapter of SU Wei-Chia’s FreeSteps series, not only holds significant meaning in that the choreographer performs in it himself, but also illustrates his method of “nearly pulling, entangling, and possessive gaze and sculpting.” Starting with Su’s solo performance under the lights, the work transitions to former dancers CHEN Pei-Jung and FANG Yu-Ting emerging from the darkness as lamp-bearers, transforming what might appear to be a solo dance into scenes of competition, complementarity, and suppression between the soloist and the observers, resembling specters. This artistic exploration of “freedom yet unfree” is deeply entwined with the eternal dilemma haunting a dancer’s body: the struggle and coexistence of physical mastery and an ailing body that is losing control. (Commentator / FAN Xiang-Jun)


Embarking on a Drift to the Unknown—National Kaohsiung Center for the Arts (Weiwuying) Kaohsiung Local Hi Project / Antinomy Company

Embarking on a Drift to the Unknown combines monologue with carefully woven soundscapes to explore memories of matrilineal transoceanic migration through a theatrical design centered on the auditory experience. The performance emphasizes sonic resonances, spatial cues, and headphone listening, transforming sound into a symbolic system that captures the fluid flow of time and emotional shifts, producing both immediate situations and historical echoes. It turns the most subtle parts of personal memories into immediately perceivable signals. This approach, similar to an adaptive receiver, uses theatrical vocabulary built from sound to challenge reliance on representations of the visible in traditional theater, offering new perspectives for engaging with the work while redefining the idea of presence within the sensory experience. (Commentator / CHANG Yin-Fang)


Macbeth Does a Ritual / Body Phase Studio

A collaboration with director WANG Mo-Lin, this work was written and performed by actor BAEK Dae-Hyun, relying solely on physical expression to create an intense solo performance and achieve an extreme form of self-fulfillment. It continues the series' previous works, grounded in the actor-director framework, to collaboratively explore key theatrical themes—this work not only signifies the ongoing development of the method but also engages with the tensions between Taiwan and the global stage, as well as between Asia and the West. Whether it is the work’s inherent theatricality and performance aesthetics, or the burden, responsibility, and care related to the external world and collective consciousness, this work highlights individuals’ unique stances and values when confronting challenges specific to this era, demonstrating that contemporary theater can serve as a spiritual space for relational politics. (Commentator / Yizai Seah)


Lament of the Wandering Head / Sun Son Theatre

This work begins with questions of individual and collective identity and life struggles, and moves toward theatrical acts of self-analysis and self-pursuit—Sun Son Theatre has a long-standing tradition of rigorous physical and musical training that also brings out its members’ innate talents and perspectives. This fully embodies the theater company’s core value of unifying performance, music, and dance. By exploring the history of the Southeast Asian Chinese diaspora and the interplay of fate across ancient and modern times through Southeast Asian supernatural legends, the production not only enriches Taiwan’s related performing arts scene but also invites us to reconsider the cognitive gaps between ourselves and others. What seems to be a fixed history of transnational cultural exchange can also be used to readdress unresolved questions about identity and survival through aesthetic creation. (Commentator /Yizai Seah)


Worn Yet Unfolding—2025 NTCH Ideas Lab / YANG Nai-Hsuan (Sunny)

YANG Nai-Hsuan’s Worn Yet Unfolding, compared to the deconstructive, cool-toned approach that emphasizes the physical development of dancers, is rooted in personal life experiences and transformed into a warm, relatable work of empathy. The work focuses on the choreographer’s midlife anxieties and delves deeply into the physical and mental traumas from her youth as she developed her skills. Worn Yet Unfolding avoids self-pity and blame, instead converting the affective power of the dancing body into a critique of the field’s ecology, becoming a passionate embrace that is “worn yet unfolding” over time. The dancer moves repeatedly on and off stage, appearing to regress yet progress, with sound design shifting between near and distant, emphasizing the temporal aspect of being “worn yet unfolding”: without repeatedly bending, folding, falling, and wearing down, the light of warmth and strength may never shine through. (Commentator / FAN Xiang-Jun)


Jing-Mu KUO Guzheng RecitalKUO Jing-Mu

Jing-Mu KUO Guzheng Recital, starting with guzheng music, reexamines the relationship between the musician, the body, and sound. Through precise communication with multiple composers in the creation of new works, it presents a clear program direction, with dialogues and resonances connecting different pieces through carefully calibrated theatrical methods. The guzheng is more than just a musical instrument; it serves as a medium for reflection on the self and the world, guiding audiences through the musician’s life journey. KUO Jin-Mu uses dramatic techniques to build layered sonic textures, sustaining the tension. This modern take on an instrumental recital opens new possibilities for blending traditional instruments with theatrical performance. (Commentator / CHANG Yin-Fang)