All posts tagged: Chan

Inflatable Life | Dawn Chan

Inflatable Life | Dawn Chan

For centuries figurative sculptors have found ways to render their subjects in motion. But how many have used motion itself as an element in their work? About a decade ago the artist Paul Chan (no relation) began affixing fans to the bases of humanoid sculptures, made from cylindrical nylon tubes, in order to animate them. These flapping, flailing inflations—Chan calls them Breathers—are not unlike the inflatable tube-men that beckon motorists into used-car dealerships. But by tweaking this archetype again and again, Chan transforms a cheap gimmick into a complex ecosystem of life-forms. The latest installments in this series are the most eye-catching of the nearly twenty works in Chan’s exhibition at the gallery Greene Naftali. Some appear to be cordially greeting viewers with a wave, while others evince the desperation of a person drowning. Too Spirituale! (after Leibniz), made earlier this year, has two surplus arms in place of a head. In several others, useless multicolored fabric appendages extend from the base. Chan might well be referring to those swatches when he cites the influence …

Nursery worker Vincent Chan sentenced to 18 years in prison for ‘abhorrent’ sexual abuse of children | UK News

Nursery worker Vincent Chan sentenced to 18 years in prison for ‘abhorrent’ sexual abuse of children | UK News

Former nursery worker Vincent Chan has been sentenced to 18 years in prison after filming himself sexually abusing children in his care.  His “abhorrent” offending stretches back two decades, first at a Finchley primary school and then at the Bright Horizons nursery in north London where he worked for seven years. Chan pleaded guilty to 56 sexual offices – including more than 30 against children – and is one of the UK’s worst known sex offenders. Judge John Dodd KC said his offending was “utterly wicked, perverse, and depraved” and the huge number of images he possessed showed a “deep-seated sexual obsession” with children. Speaking at sentencing at Wood Green Crown Court, where some parents watched in tears, he said: “Every right thinking person hearing about your offending would feel revulsion and disbelief. “You became a sexual predator and someone who clearly lost all sense of moral compass.” One thousand two hundred families have been alerted by the police and told their children may have been in contact with Chan – either at the school …

Park Chan Wook: ‘The Korean film industry is in a state of great danger’

Park Chan Wook: ‘The Korean film industry is in a state of great danger’

Get the latest entertainment news, reviews and star-studded interviews with our Independent Culture email Get the latest entertainment news with our free Culture newsletter Get the latest entertainment news with our free Culture newsletter The reason why my work was categorised as ‘violent’ or ‘grotesque’ is purely the fault of the British,” says Park Chan Wook, flashing a knowing smile in my direction. He smiles again, a minute later, when a translator repeats his words back to me. The revered South Korean filmmaker is joking, but may have a point: when Park first became a sensation in Western cinephile circles, in the early 2000s, it was British distributor Tartan that chose to market his films – Oldboy, Sympathy for Mr Vengeance, and Lady Vengeance – under the banner of “Asia Extremes”. “It wasn’t just Korean films, but Asian films – mostly horrors – that were included in that category, as well as my works,” Park says, sitting, legs crossed, on a sofa in a central London hotel suite. Admittedly, Park’s own macabre imagination was never …

Paul Chan renovates an L.A. Craftsman home inspired by Wong Kar Wai

Paul Chan renovates an L.A. Craftsman home inspired by Wong Kar Wai

Outside of Paul Chan’s Silver Lake studio, the rush of L.A. turns tranquil as pineapple guava plants brush against a wall in the warm breeze. Chan opens the wooden gate and ushers me into a sanctuary of his creation: a yard flanked by a tall tree, a worn picnic bench and a Chinese porcelain table and stools. In the shadow of the porcelain seats, as if placed by gnomes, sit four children’s chairs. Each just the size of my hand, the soft wooden chairs lie strewn around a stack of bricks. Here, in this miniature teatime, I can imagine that at any moment, children will come running back to play while adults laugh from the porch. The Hong Kong-born architect opened the studio Days of Being this year as a place for visitors to rent and artists to have a place to create and recharge. There is a sense of familiarity in the oak floorboards and the slanted sunlight within Chan’s thoughtfully designed space. The Hong Kong-born architect opened the studio, Days of Being, this …