Country for PR: Hong Kong
Contributor: PR Newswire Asia (Hong Kong)
Tuesday, November 16 2021 - 11:00
AsiaNet
"Fictional Garden: Taiwan House" Japan Tour Building Friendship through Design, Passing on Flowers and Blessings
TAIPEI, Nov. 16, 2021 /PRNewswire-AsiaNet/ --

Executed by Taiwan Design Research Institute (TDRI), the "Fictional Garden: 
Taiwan House" Japan Tour was held from October 2 to November 7, 2021, 
successively at Good Design Marunouchi in Tokyo and The Terminal KYOTO in 
Kyoto, featuring exciting exhibition and six thematic seminars that took both 
Taiwan and Japan by storm. 

For the full multimedia release, click here: 
https://www.prnasia.com/mnr/TDRI_202111.shtml 

Since 2019, the COVID-19 pandemic has spread across the world, pressing the 
pause button on all economic activities and exchanges, and bringing enormous 
impacts on the world. Nonetheless, during this erratic period, Taiwan and Japan 
have demonstrated a more resilient and stronger bond. In addition to showing 
political and diplomatic support, Japan has also made six separate donations of 
vaccines to Taiwan, furthering manifesting the close ties between Taiwan and 
Japan. 

For this reason, the cultural and design sectors in Taiwan and Japan have 
planned numerous activities to facilitate bilateral exchange, among which 
"Fictional Garden: Taiwan House" was one of the most important cultural 
exchanges between Taiwan and Japan, as well as the warm-up event of the "Taiwan 
Now" series of activities to be launched in Tokyo, Japan.

Main Spirits: Discover the Cultural Content and Design Status underneath the 
Unique Charm of "Taiwan Design" 

"Fictional Garden: Taiwan House" was jointly planned by consulting firm Plan b 
Inc. and Double-Grass that focuses on curatorial projects. Using flowers (hana 
in Japanese) as the theme, the exhibition not only passed on flowers and 
blessings symbolizing the friendship between Taiwan and Japan, but also 
showcased through flowers the splendid outcomes of the blooming Taiwan design, 
summing up Taiwan design's three main spirits of "resource integration," 
"social application," and "response to the time."

The exhibition invited 8 Taiwanese design teams and creative professionals in 
various disciplines, including Joe Fang Studio, PiliWu-Design, emerging craft 
designer Chang Chia-ling, floral designer Liao Hao-jhe, artist Mia Liu, graphic 
designer An Yen, and fashion brands Angus Chiang and Melted Potato, to create 
with sustainable materials of Spring Pool Glass and Miniwiz that strive for 
green projects, translating Taiwan's imagery of plantation and displaying the 
splendid fruits of Taiwan design's diverse cooperation. 

The exhibition also selected 10 cases or exhibits of different topics, which 
included projects that displayed Taiwan's liberal system and culture and 
combined design with social issues, such as: Design Movement on Campus, Public 
Digital Space Division, Light Up Taiwan, and Go Grandriders; smart pandemic 
prevention ward and sustainable products that conveyed Taiwan's philosophy of 
circular sustainability and response to the time; Allrover that demonstrated 
Taiwanese industries' strengths in resource integration and innovation. These 
classic design cases showcased the diverse viewpoints of Taiwan design to 
jointly interpret Taiwan's unique landscape—the "Fictional Garden" that was 
free, thriving, and unbounded, and presented the current status of Taiwan's 
contemporary design. 

Spatial Creativity: Display Taiwan's "Garden of the Future" - Fictional Garden 

The spatial design also used "flower" as the core concept, exploring what a 
garden that belonged to Taiwan would look like. Focusing on "circular 
materials," "industrial technology," and "traditional techniques," the space 
constructed display platforms symbolizing western Taiwan, the Central Mountain 
Range, and the East Rift Valley, showcasing works that echoed the plants and 
cultural patterns of the island's diverse climates. The space resembled our 
island, and was metaphor of Planet Earth that was a critical point of the 
accumulation of civilization and consumption of resources; would flexible, 
interdisciplinary, diverse, and free values blossom for our future?

Diverse Places: Displaying Cultural Fusion of Taiwan and Japan through 
different Exhibition Ambiences

With TDRI's long friendship with Japan Institute of Design Promotion (JDP), 
Taiwan House was able to make its first stop at GOOD DESIGN Marunouchi, at the 
heart of Tokyo near Tokyo Station. Works by Taiwanese designers were showcased 
at the modern, clean venue with large windows, giving Taiwan's Fictional Garden 
a refreshing and avant-garde ambience. 

The exhibition made its next stop at The Terminal Kyoto, a traditional Japanese 
"machiya" (wooden townhouse) with a history of nearly a century that was full 
of traditional cultural spirit and carried imprints of local lifestyle. The 
curator used the vocabulary of space, rearranging layout and constructing 
traffic flow, to manifest under the same framework of contents the tender and 
flexible, and adaptive and agile cultural qualities of Taiwan, giving Fictional 
Garden a brand new look. 

Experience of All Sense: Perceive the "Island Scents" of Taiwan - Breath Taiwan

The fragrance that filled the exhibition space was the smell imprint of the 
treasure island of Taiwan reinterpreted by P.Seven Taiwan Tea Perfume founder 
Pan on the foundation of Taiwan's forest, temples, and tea culture. Also, this 
fragrance is designed to be the exclusive fragrance of Taoyuan International 
Airport Corporation, so when visitors arrive in Taiwan, they begin to breathe 
in this island every step they make. The fragrance allowed visitors of "Taiwan 
House" to breathe and feel the unique features of Taiwan design, leaving 
"profound impressions of Taiwan" through a unique experience of all senses. 

In-depth Interaction: Further Excavate and Display the Current Status of Taiwan 
Design

Not only were there physical exhibitions of "Fictional Garden: Taiwan House" 
available in Tokyo and Kyoto, exciting Taiwan-Japan online forums were also 
planned in correspondence with the exhibition themes. The forums proposed six 
themes: #Social Innovation, #Sustainable Industry, #Public Design, #Regional 
Revitalization, #Old Building Revitalization, and #Co-Working Symbiosis. 
Through the perspective of design, and different viewpoints of Taiwan and 
Japan, the forums explored the relationship between citizens and social 
policies, how designers could drive industrial revitalization, how industries 
could strike a balance between development and environmental protection, and 
designers' mission and social influences, allowing participants from both sides 
to further understand cultural, industrial, social, and temporal demands and 
search for core values of future design and innovation, while also 
strengthening the friendship between Taiwan and Japan. The six forums attracted 
over 700 citizens from both Taiwan and Japan. 

During the exhibition period, Taiwan Representative to Japan Frank Hsieh, 
Taipei Economic and Cultural Office in Osaka Deputy Director Chang Yung-hsien, 
Overseas Taiwanese in Kyoto Organization Executive Director Liu Chia-ling and 
Director Yang Bee-jing, and JIDA Chairperson Tachikawa Eisuke and former 
Chairperson Tanaka Kazuo, all visited "Fictional Garden: Taiwan House." 
According to feedback of Japanese citizens, this co-creative exhibition and 
exchange between Taiwan and Japan comprehensively displayed the development of 
Taiwan design in recent years, as well as the diverse and inclusive qualities 
of Taiwanese culture, allowing them to see works of Taiwan design that were 
unprecedented, innovative, and stunning. 

SOURCE: TAIWAN DESIGN RESEARCH INSTITUTE (TDRI) 

Image Attachments Links:

   Link: https://iop.asianetnews.net/view-attachment?attach-id=407577

   Caption: The exhibition invited 8 Taiwanese creative professionals from 
different disciplines to produce new creative works using sustainable materials

   Link: https://iop.asianetnews.net/view-attachment?attach-id=407579

   Caption: Taiwan's imagery of plantation are translated through design to 
display the current status of Taiwan's design ecosystem that is free, diverse, 
thriving, and unbounded.

   Link: https://iop.asianetnews.net/view-attachment?attach-id=407581

   Caption: The exhibition made its first stop at GOOD DESIGN Marunouchi near 
Tokyo Station, displaying the look of "Taiwan's Garden of the Future – 
Fictional Garden."

   Link: https://iop.asianetnews.net/view-attachment?attach-id=407582

   Caption: Works of creative professionals displayed at an ancient 
architecture in Kyoto to showcase the perfect cultural fusion of Taiwan and 
Japan.

   Link: https://iop.asianetnews.net/view-attachment?attach-id=407583

   Caption: P.Seven Taiwan Tea Perfume is the exclusive fragrance of the 
exhibition, allowing visitors to also breathe in Taiwan in addition to 
perceiving the island through their eyes and ears.

Translations

Japanese