Press Release

It is difficult to define So Yo Hen’s creative journey as either linear or binary. His work spans a wide range of experiences and expressions: it includes the frenetic sketches from his early days of pairing with strangers in online chatrooms, and his independent music label “Indi Indi,” which features the voice of marginalized individuals with “their insignificant sounds.” His piece Hua-shan-qiang (2013) draws on Taiwanese funeral rituals and paper craft to navigate the realms of life and death, blended with political reflections on Taiwan’s colonial history and status quo. Plaster Gong (2017) resonates with the fragile sounds of Taiwan’s modern identity. The intimate sculpture from the time spent with his sons, encapsulated in the warm nighttime exchange, Goodnight, see you later. (2021), evokes familial bond. In Taman-taman (Park) (2024), he examines with compassion and humour the lives of Indonesian migrant workers, easing the weight of reality with poetic transitions. These diverse themes, be it grand or modest, are captured through So’s shifting lens, rendered in different media and his fluid artistic language, each piece scratching an itch in the viewer’s consciousness.

Compared to his previous solo exhibitions, So’s latest show_Drawing From Monday_, comprised entirely of drawings, is much lighter in form and concept. The exhibition features nearly a hundred watercolour drawings, each on A4 size paper. Though small in scale, they embody the artist’s daily practice and disciplined routine, reflecting a state of urgency in which an illustrator finds themselves when racing against a deadline. The exhibition title, Drawing From Monday, instantiates the state of constant art making. “I set a rule for myself to draw at least one piece a day, as if every day were Monday. I just keep drawing, nonstop, every single day,” So explained. The original sketches for these drawings mostly came from So’s sketchbook, where they began as flashes of inspiration or storyboards for various projects. The catalyst for transferring these sketches onto paper as colourful drawings was a gift of several stacks of A4 size paper from a friend who runs a publishing and printing business.

I began killing time, drawing on these sheets of paper, without a specific agenda in mind. Sometimes I draw for the kids; other times, I draw for my wife. Family is the basis of these drawings. I don’t have a studio. The only time I leave the house is for film shooting. I write scripts or edit footage right there in the living room, keeping my family company while I work. There’s a deeper sense of familial bond in the act of drawing. There’s no need to run around. I can share with my kids whatever I’ve drawn, and they would start drawing, too. For my kids, what I do for a living becomes crystal clear because of drawing.

— So Yo Hen

Even though family life has become part of So’s creative process, these drawings do not explicitly reference the sense of family. Instead, each drawing is like a vignette with subtle, pointed humour. Witty and mordant, these drawings bring a smile to the face, yet lurk behind a thin veil of melancholy — warped by a sense of distance and solitude through the artist’s gaze. These wry, biting scenarios, limed by the tip of the artist’s brush, and rendered in watercolour on crisp white A4 size paper, while small in scale, unfold in visual authenticity.

For So, art making is as much personal as it is political, a space that allows for hefty investigation and airy levity. Drawing From Monday manifests itself in the artist’s defiance of constraints and self-indulgent exploration of the whimsical world on paper. Following the artist’s footsteps, the viewer — traversing Hua-shan-qiang, heeding the distant echo of Plaster Gong, listening in on stories that unravel in Taman-taman, and beholding the countless nights of bidding goodnight to his kids before delving into work — watches as So Yo Hen unfurls and coalesces into a kaleidoscope of changing faces.

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Installation Views

Selected Works

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About the Artist

Born in 1982 in Tainan, Taiwan, So Yo Hen now lives in Tainan.

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Also Exhibiting at TKG+

About the Gallery

A forerunner of Taiwanese modern art, the Tina Keng Gallery hinges upon the philosophy that art is a reflection of the times. The Tina Keng Gallery has its roots in the Lin & Keng Gallery (1992–2009) based in Taipei, Taiwan and Beijing, China. Delving into Western painting and Chinese art history, Lin & Keng tirelessly promoted the work of Asian classical masters, cultivating a critical thought on Greater Chinese modern art. The Tina Keng Gallery has continued this tradition by centering its focus on Asia, further excavating art history and rediscovering modern aesthetics. Upon this foundation, the Tina Keng Gallery is steadfast in nurturing Taiwanese modern and contemporary art, with hopes to capture the changing states of art through writings of history, in so doing highlighting the cultural underpinnings of its worldview. Art arises from culture, and culture mirrors the times. The Tina Keng Gallery endeavors not only to support Greater Chinese modern and contemporary art, but to shape a perspective that is elementally Asian.

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