Hou Hanru
self-organized alternative spaces run by the art community.[4] The 2002 Gwangju Biennale articulated this phenomenon by inviting more than twenty-five alternative spaces and self-organizations from Asia and other continents to self-curate and present their works as the core principle of the Biennale project. These organizations are extremely diverse, responding to the specific cultural, economic, and political conditions of their own localities and identifying the very need to be different. This new movement, from the very beginning, was born from the process of artists engaging themselves in
the creation of new urban spaces and life styles in light of the impact of urban expansion--the most essential aspect of Asia-Pacific's modernization. Almost all self-organized artists' groups and spaces emerge in cities and evolve in their negotiations for particular positions in the urban life. They are often physically small, flexible, and continuously adapting to the conditions driven by urban development. Alternative spaces such as IT Park (Taipei), Para-site (Hong Kong), Project 304 (Bangkok), Loft (Beijing), About Café (Bangkok), Big Sky Mind (Manila), Plastic Kinetic Worms (Singapore), Loop (Seoul), Pool (Seoul), Cemeti Art House (Jogyakarta), and Ruangruppa (Jakarta) are located in the historic centers of their cities and effectively influence the surrounding communities. Other groups such as Big Tail Elephants (Guangzhou), U-kabat (Bangkok), APA (Kuala Lumpur), and Forum A (Seoul), being more "immaterial," practice urban-guerrilla strategies by occupying temporary spaces in their cities. They all, however, share an interest in
new technologies and related cultural strategies as active reactions to the demands of the epoch. Numerous alternative spaces and groups have focused on such a direction. Videotage (Hong Kong) and Movelfund (Manila) are influential bases for experimental video and film production and organizers of multimedia festivals. Project 304 presents the biannual Bangkok Experimental Film Festival. In the meantime, another generation is actively forging the new Asian
youth culture and new forms of expression that are deeply rooted in the culture of consumption (advertising, etc.) yet highly critical of this "raw reality." The complex, often contradictory, relations between artists and their social conditions, especially the institutional infrastructure, have led these artists to an understanding of the need to develop different visions and methods of contemporary art creation. This further pushes them to promote
different ways of defining contemporary art.
7. These artists respond to the continuous social crisis of political-economic struggles, bringing to the fore conflicts between the concepts-strategies of immediacy/multiplicity and the stability of established norms. They have proposed new solutions to the
global-capitalist problem. At the 2002 Gwangju Biennale, the artists-run gallery and working group Kurimanzutto (based in Mexico City, but making themselves temporary "Asians" by doing a site-specific project for the Biennale) realized a wonderful piece that is extremely relevant to the Asian economic and social context. Ironically calling their project
Friendly Capitalism, they set up a space with a blue carpet and a photocopy machine inside the exhibition hall. They made photocopies of the official Biennale catalogue and sold them to the public at a much lower price. By miming the
piracy of information products--something largely welcomed by the local public as a means of access to information and new technologies--Kurimanzutto hit upon a fundamental problem in the logic of capitalist systems of production and communication. In fact,
piracy and other alternative economic activities are the most efficient and, very often, the only available means for people from the non-West to access technological and economic progress. Thanks to these alternative activities, Asian artists are able to create great multimedia artworks and the public is able to have regular access to them.
8. For various reasons, ranging from personal to economic, from sociopolitical to strategical, these alternative spaces are constantly
appearing, evolving, and disappearing, and they ultimately transform themselves into different modes of practice. This is precisely the essence of
the new paradigm of "institution": always moving, flexible, changing, and reinventing itself.