The Office of Arcana

2022 / 03 / 02 Wed.

2022 / 04 / 10 Sun.

10:00 - 18:00

  • Venue

    MoCA Stuido

  • Artist

    Duncan Mountford

About

The Office of Arcana is a memory, or maybe a foretelling. It is a segment of a larger Office, a place where there are more corridors, more rooms. In this fragment there are only six. At the end of each corridor is a closed door, and through the window of each door can be seen further spaces.

A series of ideas and images underlie this installation, although no one idea is given prominence. The Office of Arcana exists as a space to be explored, as a set of images and fragments that can be decoded in different ways. There is no one meaning. It is, to quote, all a matter of perspective.


The starting point for the installation was a series of ideas that connected certain historical and contemporary military developments with the history of arcane thought in the UK. Bringing together these two areas of disparate knowledge began as a way to question those (including the artist) who can be seduced into believing they know the way things are. As the ideas developed the speculative connections were revealed as being based on historical events, or maybe on the single fact that with a collection of fragmented facts connections can always be made1. Further themes and concepts began to emerge, specifically a growing realisation that the world is changing, and that the industrial/financial philosophy that once seemed central to globalization also contained the seeds of its own destruction.

The sense of the haunted landscape of the UK fed into the ideas, together with the recognition of similar places in Taiwan, places where structures could be the ruins of an unspecified future. The once derided literature of science fiction now seems to catch the present state with greater clarity than those who stated we were at the end of history (though in a way maybe we are). The land is haunted by what might have been2.

The corridors began with memories of exploring ruins in Liverpool, of government institutional spaces, offices for interviews, of spaces glimpsed through half-open doors. Corridors that symbolise interrogation and bureaucratic inertia, corridors that lead nowhere. In addition to the experience of actual abandoned spaces the installation has been influenced by the imagery and ideas of British science-fiction television programmes, and science-fiction films, of the 1960’s and 1970’s (the artist’s formative years). In these fictions alternative realities were conjured with plywood and models, producing worlds that allowed imagination to complete the scenario3.

There is also the influence of the numerous abandoned industrial and military buildings to be found in Taiwan, spaces that exert a fascination as initiators of speculative narratives. The installation contains elements of autobiography, with memories of the UK interweaving with current experiences of Taiwan.

Parts of the installation draw on the visual language of museum dioramas, puppet theatres, film sets that confuse simple readings of space and perspective, and the narrative sculptures to be found in European sacred spaces. The relationship with the miniature, and how there is an imaginative leap into the scaled-down spaces is perhaps analogous to the suspension of disbelieve that lies at the heart of a narrative installation and a theatrical set. The viewer becomes a participant in the work, an active presence4.

It is all a matter of perspective5.



1 | Various examples of this can be found, from the drawing of canals on Mars to Ley Lines. From Foucault’s Pendulum to The Illuminatus Trilogy narratives are woven from disconnected events. Robert Markley Dying Planet, Mars in Science and the Imagination has information on the perception of the Martian Canals; Alfred Watkins The Old Straight Track for ley lines; Umberto Eco, Foucault’s Pendulum, and Robert Shea and Robert Anton Wilson The Illuminatus Trilogy both deal with narratives constructed from disparate facts and unhinged speculation.
2 | Mark Fisher explored this theme in essays and sound works. In music in the UK this continues to resonate. See Mark Fisher Ghosts of My Life: Writings on Depression, Hauntology, and Lost Futures.
3 | Specifically Dr Who and the Quatermass trilogy, especially Quatermass and the Pit in both the television and film versions.
4 | Susan Stewart’s On Longing contains a poetic essay concerning the relationship of the viewer to the miniature.
5 | This is stolen from Terry Pratchet, but is true nonetheless.

MORE

LESS

Artist

Duncan Mountford

Duncan Mountford was born in Liverpool, UK, and studied Fine Art in Liverpool and Coventry from 1972 to 1976. He was a community artist in Coventry, and in 1984 returned to Liverpool and joined the Arena Studios. He studied MA Sculpture at Winchester School of Art from 1993 to 1994, and in 1998 began a PhD at Nottingham Trent University with scholarship funding. He completed his PhD in 2004. He has exhibited widely, both nationally and internationally, and he has been a Visiting Professor at Taipei National University of the Arts since 2013.

Artwork

The Office of Arcana
MORE

CLOSE

CLOSE

Notice Copyright & Privacy Policy

Copyright Notice

MOCA Taipei holds a high respect for the copyright of others, and it is stated in MOCA Taipei’s terms of service that any user of the museum’s service shall not infringe on others’ copyright. Therefore, MOCA Taipei hereby ask all our users to respect others’ copyright. If you think any of the content on MOCA Taipei’s website or anyone using MOCA Taipei’s service has infringed on your copyright, we strongly advice to you to file a complaint according to the regulations stated below, and MOCA Taipei customer service center will initiate related procedures as soon as possible.

  • Regulations Governing the Report on Copyright Infringement

    If any of the content on MOCA Taipei’s website or anyone using MOCA Taipei’s service has infringed on your copyright, please fill out the “Copyright Infringement Notice,” provide the information and statements listed on the notice, and send them to MOCA Taipei via fax.

    1. Signature of the copyright owner or the signature of the proxy of the copyright owner; document proving the ownership of the copyright and the copyrighted contents, i.e. the cover and related pages of a publication, print-outs of webpage contents and the URL.

    2. The webpage and URL containing the contents that cause the copyright infringement.

    3. Your contact address and phone number.

    4. A written statement stating that you believe the use of the webpage content is without the consent of the copyright owner, the proxy of the copyright owner, or the authorization of the law.

    5. A written statement confirming that the information you state in the notice is truthful and you hereby make the statement as the copyright owner or the proxy of the copyright owner.

  • MOCA Taipei’s principle of handling the report on copyright infringement:

    1. MOCA Taipei will remove the webpage content claimed to cause the copyright infringement as soon as possible after receiving your notice, and will inform the user about the infringement via email. If the said user objects to said infringement, MOCA Taipei can provide your name, email or phone number to said user so that direct communication can be achieved to resolve the dispute.

    2. According to MOCA Taipei’s privacy policy and related regulations, MOCA Taipei is only allowed to provide a user’s personally identifiable information to a third party by the request of the law or a governmental agency unless said user agrees or for the purpose of providing a service. Therefore, when you file a report, MOCA Taipei will only remove the contents causing the copyright infringement, and will not provide you any personally identifiable information of said user. If you wish to obtain the user’s information, a legal proceeding must be filed at the District Prosecutor’s Office or the Criminal Investigation Bureau, who will issue an official letter to MOCA Taipei requesting the user’s information. In the case, MOCA Taipei will comply accordingly.

Privacy and Data Protection Policy

MOCA Taipei values user’s privacy very much and has implemented the following privacy and data protection policy, which is listed below for your reference.

The privacy and data protection policy includes MOCA Taipei’s management of personal identifiable information collected when providing users the website service as well as MOCA Taipei’s management of any personal identifiable information shared between the museum and our business partners.

The privacy and data protection policy is not applicable to any enterprise other than MOCA Taipei, nor does it apply to those that are not staff or managements employed by MOCA Taipei.

When you register a MOCA Taipei account, use MOCA Taipei’s products or services, browse MOCA Taipei’s website, take part in related promotional activities or gifting programs, MOCA Taipei will collect your personal identifiable information. MOCA Taipei is also allowed to obtain said information from our business partners.

When you register a MOCA Taipei account, you will be asked to provide your name, email, date of birth, sex, work title, field of profession and personal interests. Once your registration is successful and the account is successfully logged into for the use of our service, we will be able to recognize you.

MOCA Taipei also automatically receive and record the server data on your browser, including IP address, the information in MOCA Taipei’s cookie and the record of visited webpages.

MOCA Taipei uses the information for the following purposes: to improve advertisement and webpage contents provided for you, to complete your request for a certain product and to notify you about a special event or new project.

MOCA Taipei will not sell or loan your personal identifiable information to anyone.

In the following circumstances, MOCA Taipei will provide your personal identifiable information to a governmental agency, an individual or a company.

To obtain your consent before sharing the information with other individuals or companies.

To provide a requested product or service, which requires sharing your information with other individuals or companies.

To provide a requested product or service, which requires providing the information to companies providing the product or service on behalf of MOCA Taipei. (Without our notice in advance, these companies will not have the right to use the personal information we provided for purposes other than provide a product or service.

To abide the law or the request of a governmental agency.

When an action on the website violates MOCA Taipei’s terms of service or the specific user’s guidelines of a product or service.

Other information required to be disclosed by the Computer-Processed Personal Data Protection Law or other regulations.

To protect user’s privacy and personal data, MOCA Taipei is not allowed to look up other user’s account information for you. Should you need to look up someone else’s information due to legal issues, please contact the police to file a legal proceeding. MOCA Taipei will fully cooperate with the police to provide necessary information to assist with the investigation and solve the case.

MOCA Taipei will access your computer setup to extract MOCA Taipei’s cookie.

MOCA Taipei allows the companies that place advertisements on the museum website to access your computer setup and extract cookies. Other companies will follow their own privacy and data protection policies to use cookies instead of MOCA Taipei’s policy. Other advertisers or companies are not allowed to extract MOCA Taipei’s cookie.

When MOCA Taipei conducts tasks related to our products and services, web beacons are used to access our website network to use cookies.

MOCA Taipei’s users have the right to revise their personal MOCA Taipei account information and set up personal preferences anytime, including the option as to whether you would like to receive notifications about special events or new products.

Based on the Computer-Processed Personal Data Protection Law, when the purpose of using your personal information expires, MOCA Taipei will provide the service to delete your account and data. However, to do so, please contact us via telephone.

MOCA Taipei adopts a method that conforms to the Computer-Processed Personal Data Protection Law to protect your personal information.

To protect your privacy and safety, the data in your MOCA Taipei account will be password-protected.

Under some circumstances, MOCA Taipei uses the standard SSL security system to ensure the safety of data transmission.

MOCA Taipei has the right to revise our policies at any time necessary. When the regulations regarding using personal information are extensively revised, public announcements will be made on our website to inform you about the revisions.

Please tell us your ideas and suggestions here.