Exhibition
in Taipei City / Taiwan
- Cole Lu: City of Truth, 2024, burnt birch, 45.8 x 61 x 3.8 cm
- Djordje Ozbolt: Odd couple – loving couple 2, 2024, oil on canvas, 100 x 100 cm
Each Modern is thrilled to present the two-person exhibition “Interstellar Traveler to Home” by Cole Lu and Djordge Ozobolt, marking the debut of these two artists in Taiwan. Through a diverse range of mediums and emotions, the artists delve into the intersection of personal histories with deeply ingrained cultural, political, and historical contexts. Drawing inspiration from the resurgence of interest in astrology in the 21st century, they contemplate the evolution of human perception amidst historical backgrounds, embracing new layers of significance.
Astrology has evolved uniquely across different regions throughout history, eventually becoming a globally shared and recognizable cultural heritage. While astrology has been utilized for various political assessments, it is not solely conservative; at times, it even catalyzes progress in eras. It is intellectually rigorous and intricately intertwined with the complexities of civilizations. In observing the present, astrology has experienced a revival in the 21st century, intertwined with individualism and consumer culture, as a means to seek identity, cultivate subcultures, and enhance personal growth. Similar to practices such as abstinence, meditation, fencing, dance, and yoga, contemporary astrology delineates one’s personality, environment, and relationships, providing avenues for individuals to shape their world and selves.
Cole Lu approaches image-making techniques with quasi-prophetic fervor, reshaping familiar atmospheres from a historical lineage in a strikingly innovative manner. His intentionally reduced palette and expressive forms, reminiscent of poetry and literature, employ dramatic, rugged, yet script-like methods that propel his works in a new direction. Lu distances himself from conventional canonical endeavors, embedding his resistance to contemporary power structures, by focusing outside of identity discourse, emphasizing his idiosyncratic approach to the canvas and the unfolding of the “painting” itself. Recent works integrate gestures of European Renaissance painting, employing colors and linework in an unconventional painterly manner akin to woodcut prints, seemingly chiseling out fiery forms from the abstract spaces of the canvas. The figures in these works exude a rugged, dignified, and strangely serene aura, particularly against the burnt- through gaps on the canvas, deliberately accentuating the solemnity of the depicted themes.
In the exhibition, Cole Lu delves into humanity’s exploration of the uncharted cosmos and the retrieval of a fictional communication previously dispatched. By merging the Pioneer Plaque and the Voyager Golden Record from the Cold War era with archival imagery, Lu intricately weaves a narrative that transcends time and space, presenting visionary verses within a historical framework of resurgence. Additionally, Lu explores the nuanced notion of return, intertwining personal heritage with notions of homecoming, all while symbolically illustrating the contemplation of the individual’s journey originating from Taiwan.
Djordge Ozobolt‘s paintings emanate a sculptural presence, featuring clear forms and expansive classical backgrounds. These techniques serve to counterbalance the whimsical, narrative associations of the themes and the weight of satirizing bad painting. The vibrant, intense, artificial colors in his works reveal his humor, placing our visual experience in an unfamiliar style and eliciting strong reactions by defying audience expectations. His new works expand his visual language to encompass memories that are both deeply personal and universally recognizable, drawn from shared and identifiable internet heatmaps, consciously or unconsciously represented in his imaginative and colorful style, bearing the unmistakable artistic lineage of surrealism.
Just as practitioners of astrology have transitioned from a minority to a majority, Ozobolt’s new painting series “Odd Couple – Loving Couple” features these familiar yet extraordinary interstellar travelers seeking love and solace, mirroring past, present, and even future versions of ourselves. Critic Oliver Basciano characterizes Ozobolt’s distinctive works as “evil grand images that may also be pioneers of peace and love,” defying categorization and viewing all with equality: where vulgar horror intersects with grand history, internet chaos coexists with classic culture, ultimately evoking a sense of anarchy and decentralization, where no cultural phenomenon can offer a coherent explanation for power. Ozobolt’s works suggest that we must continue to flourish in a free social order, shaping a new societal structure.
Cole Lu, born in Taipei, is an artist and writer currently based in New York. His work intricately weaves historical and literary allusions with personal narratives, creating tales of discord and yearning through intricate journeys. His sculptures and paintings are made of burnt wood panels, linen, engraved metal, and concrete, with elaborate scenes of a mythological retelling. Through pyrography (writing with fire) and the use of extensive and subversive titles for his works, Lu returns to the poetic origins of storytelling that liberate his work from established linear hierarchies of thought and form.
Born in Belgrade, Yugoslavia in 1967, Djordje Ozbolt briefly studied architecture in his hometown before settling in London in 1991. Ozbolt received his BA from the Slade School of Fine Art and his MA from the Royal Academy of Art. He has participated in numerous solo and group exhibitions, at museums such as the Tate Modern in London Serbian Pavilion at the S8th Venice Biennale, 2019.
Gallery hours Tues – Sat 12:30 pm – 6:30 pm
Exhibition Duration 20 July – 31 August 2024
Location:
Each Modern Gallery
3F., No. 97, Sec. 2, Dunhua S. Rd., Da'an Dist.
106420 Taipei City
Taiwan


