Etan Pavavalung / Paiwan people / Taiwan b.1963

Paiwan artist, Etan Pavavalung, was born into the Tavadran tribe of Dashe village, Sandimen town in Pingtung County. He grew up in the renowned Pulima artisan family and was immersed in Paiwan life where traditional arts and culture are showcased everywhere. It would also set the tone for his future art creations. When studying at Yushan Theological College and Seminary and Tainan Theological College and Seminary, he was inspired to contemplate on philosophy and religious art. Besides writing poems and prose, he is also a director of several documentaries excelling at imagery poetry. He has also been learning and keeping records on the Paiwanese mouth-blown and nose flutes, and as a consequence, the Ministry of Culture designated him as a cultural ambassador of the traditional performing arts. His innovative art form, “Trace Layer Carve Paint”, has become the signature feature of his artwork.

Etan’s creative art is deeply embedded in his subjectivity about his culture and his reflections on society and the ecosystem. In the 1990s, during the “Return Our Lands” and “Regain Our Names” indigenous movements, Etan took the flower lily, the token of the tribe’s spirit, and represented it on posters and T-shirts in the hope of strengthening identity. He excels at presenting multiple cultural imagery and depictions of the indigenous Taiwan lily. Through personified visual movements, he creates harmony between humanity and the natural ecosystem. The aesthetic concept behind his mother culture, “Vecik” (lines, patterns, and words), nourishes his exploration in art performance. In 2009, Etan took gravers to be his pens and wood board as his canvas and created “Trace Layer Carve Paint” as his anchor in terms of technique and form in the visual arts. “Trace Layer Carve Paint” shows the “trace” that the creator leaves on nature and the earth, and the civilized texture that is piled up in the “layers” of stone slab houses. Etan “carves” down deep into the cultural spirit, “paints” and widens artistic possibilities.

Etan has participated in numerous important exhibitions, such as Art-Taipei 2018; “A Beast, a God, a Line”, an international joint exhibition at the Museum of Modern Art in Warsaw; opening animation design for Taipei’s 2017 Universiade, the “Vibrant Island, Psalm of Life”; resident artist at Charles Darwin University, Australia; “Encounter in that End of the Forest” represented Taiwan as the Director in Focus at the 2017 Taiwan International Ethnographic Film Festival; resident artist in d’abord les forêts… / opus 2; “Taiwan Biennial: Yes, Taiwan!”. His solo exhibitions include “Reading Sa-qati”, NCTU Art Center, Hsinchu, Taiwan; “Gazing at Taiwan Lily”, Chung-Shan National Gallery, 2017; “Encounter, in that End of the Forest”, Providence University, Art Center, 2014; “The Fragrant Mountain Winds”, Taipei Fine Arts Museum. Outside of developing his own artwork, Etan has also been joint curator of the Greater Sandimen Arts Festivals. He is one of the key coordinators in promoting the greater Sandimen contemporary arts.

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The 10th Asia Pacific Triennial Of Contemporary Art (Apt10)
The 10th Asia Pacific Triennial Of Contemporary Art (Apt10)

Published in The 10th Asia Pacific Triennial Of Contemporary Art (Apt10)

“Between Earth and Sky: Indigenous Contemporary Art from Taiwan” is one of the projects to feature in ‘The 10th Asia Pacific Triennial of Contemporary Art’ (APT10) presented at QAGOMA, in Brisbane, Australia, from 4 Dec. 2021 until 25 April, 2022.

Indigenous Contemporary Art from Taiwan
Indigenous Contemporary Art from Taiwan

Written by Indigenous Contemporary Art from Taiwan

About Contemporary Indigenous Artists and their works in Taiwan