
Exhibition Works
Blurred Shores
2025
Single-channel video, 8’52”




“Blurred Shores” generates imagery and sound through algorithms, weaving together the Spanish-era Red Hair Fort, the natural coastline, memory, and topography to form a blurred boundary. The map’s clear coordinates become flowing geographies in reality; through aerial imagery, layered sound, and field sampling, it sketches local memory and posits the coast as a fluid narrative where time, institutions, and landscape forces intersect. Using real North Coast aerial data as material, the work couples audiovisual interactivity with AI-generated imagery to translate abstract codes into thresholds that exist in daily life, shaping a landscape where the virtual and the real intertwine.
Currently he lives and works in Tainan, Taiwan. He holds a MFA in Institute of Music from National Yang Ming Chiao Tung University, and he majored in multimedia composition. Most of his artworks start with the conception of space to create a new intermediary space through the mapping of light and information visualization, thereby revealing a dialectical relationship between real and sensory existence. He tries to blur the abstract boundaries of perceptions by switching between vision and hearing in space. He has been selected with the 2022 Giga-Hertz Production Award from the ZKM Center for Art and Media Karlsruhe, the Nanying Award for Video and New Media, the NEXT Art Tainan Award, etc. In recent years, he has conducted resident creations and exhibitions in Taiwan and abroad, including in Japan, United State, United Kingdom, Germany, New Zealand, Netherlands, South Korea, France, Mongoli, etc.

Yu-Jung CHEN