Friday, May 7, 2010

Art Exhibitions in Taiwan (Taipei, Kaohsiung)


I have two art exhibitions going up in Taiwan. The first is at Alleycats HuaShan in Taipei. It's a nice art area made from a previous wine factory. Stop by to see the paintings and eat some pizza. It will be open until early June, the flier is up above.
謬象 德瑞克。墨菲
開幕派對 4/25 (日)8-10PM

巷貓 – 華山店:
台北市八德路一段一號

The next is in Kaohsiung, at the Warehouse art gallery. This is near Pier 2, also an artistic area, with some great galleries and art stuff. If you're in Taiwan and want to see some contemporary art or surreal oil paintings, please stop by to see my art exhibitions.

德瑞克墨菲 (Derek Murphy)
展覽將於 5/15 (六) 晚上6~9:30隆重開幕
歡迎喜好藝術的朋友前往參觀
本期展覽將持續展覽至5月29日
千萬別錯過喔!
地址: 鹽埕區莒光街67號, 靠近捷運鹽埕埔站


You can see more of my work at www.derekmurphyart.com



Doing business in Taiwan: Dealing with Men vs. Women

I'm going to throw a cultural stereotype/generalization at you, which I think may mostly be true.

Recently I needed to get some printing done. I went to my usual store, which is run by a bunch of teenage girls, and was quickly frustrated. They had no customer service, I was always waiting, they didn't try hard to figure out what I wanted, and rather than offering solutions I got a lot of negativity. They didn't know how to print just what I wanted, how I wanted, in the right size, with the right paper... and in the end, when I said I needed it in 2 days (by Saturday) they said it was impossible. So I walked out.

Down the street I found another shop. A 40+ year old guy helped me out. He was very helpful, got exactly what I need ordered. At first he made a big deal about Saturday being impossible, but I kept pushing and finally he said he'd get it done. I was very excited; he'd shown me samples - if my stuff looked like the samples it would be great. Very high quality.

Unfortunately.... to get things printed well shops need to send them out to a factory for laser printing. There's a 2 day wait that can't be sped up. Because I had pushed so hard and the guy wanted me business, he took the job but printed the fliers in store on his copiers. Result: thinner paper weight, much lowered quality. He even squished my file to make it fit the standard printing size, so the pictures were squished. Not horrible, but not the quality that I had wanted. Yes, it's my fault for being in a rush and feeling like I deserve to be able to break the rules and get things done faster. But still.

Cultural Stereotypes about Taiwan/Asia that I've learned from the experience.

1) Girls are taught to follow rules. They are slow, insecure, can't think outside the box, follow the instructions and guidelines. However - they probably have learned the 'right' way to do it and that way may really be the best way. They probably know what they're doing. It's best to conform to them and their suggestion than make them conform to what you want; you may be wrong/not understand why they think you need to do it their way.

2) Guys are more inventive. They'll cut corners. They'll give you what you ask for. They're less concerned with making the best product and more concerned with meeting your requirements. They may be more likely to cheat or scam you with less quality.

Also - the men are often the bosses: so if they scam or cheat you, it's because they are directly getting the extra profit.

Meanwhile women are the employees. They aren't interested in scheming you out of your money - because they won't see any of it anyway. They are concerned with giving you the best product.

Thus: When doing business in Asia/Taiwan, deal with the women if you want the best. Deal with the men if you want something faster, cheaper, or more customized.

Monday, March 29, 2010

Chinese Marble Fu dog with baby sculpture

Beautiful and unique marble statue; probably used to be a set but just have the one. Discovered it in the ruins of an old house in Southern Taiwan. Pretty sure it's marble. Extremely heavy. Base is 12x6.5. Signed with Chinese character stamp carved in.

Not sure about the history...

18th century Japanese Ivory owl carving

Recently inherited this piece from the family estate; was given to my mother as a child from an older relative. There is a signature on the base in (japanese?) characters. Based on similar items, my best guess is that this is carved Japanese ivory, probably 18th/19th century. The eyes and feet are painted yellow, a little carelessly. This may have been done later. The feet are metal/ivory.

The piece is pretty heavy; maybe mammoth?

What do you think it is? Value estimate?

12th Century Khmer Bronze Figure of Buddha Muchalinda

I've had this piece for years and am suddenly aware that it might be very valuable; if authentic. The style of the piece is most similar (identical) to pieces from the 12th century Cambodia, Angkor Thom or Khmer region. It's 16" tall, the base is 4.5x3". It is "well cast and sensitively modeled, with Buddha seated in meditation on the coils of Muchalinda, rising to form a seven-headed hood sheltering Buddha, his face with a serene expression with downcast eyes and hands held in his lap, the faces of the nagas well defined and with incised scales retaining original gilding, with a smooth blue green patina  (which results from azurite leeching out of the metal over the centuries)" (description modified from similar item).

I have no way of telling whether it is truly 8 centuries old or was cleverly made to look that way; I need an expert appraiser for this. However, I've seen no 'fakes' or reproductions that look like this; everything I can find that's similar sells for anywhere between $1000 to $50,000... My piece is unique in that it breaks into 3 pieces - base, seated buddha, and 7 naga backpiece. I have seen other statues of the same period where the Buddha also was loose from its supporting stand. So what do you think? Authentic? Value?





MORE INFORMATION:
In Buddhist iconography, naga serpents bring wisdom and protection. Mucalinda, Muchalinda or Mucilinda is the name of the specific naga depicted in this statue. This particular naga protected the Buddha from the a rain storm after the Buddha's enlightenment. Here's the story: four weeks after Sakyamuni Buddha began meditating under the Bodhi tree, the heavens darkened for seven days, and a prodigious rain descended. The mighty king of serpents, Mucalinda, came from beneath the earth, and protected with his hood He who is the source of all protection. When the great storm cleared, the serpent king assumed his human form, bowed before the Buddha, and returned in joy to his palace.

There are numerous extant Cambodian images of this configuration because it was the focus of a cult during the reign of the Cambodian king Jayavarman VII, who ruled the Khmer empire from about 1181 to 1218. Although this scene had been depicted earlier in South and Southeast Asian art, it was the Khmer who popularized this particular image of the Buddha seated under the Naga's 7-Headed canopy. The reasons that Jayavarman chose to stress the Muchilinda Buddha remain speculative. Snakes were associated with healing, and perhaps because Jayavarman may have been lame, he emphasized healing, as indicated by his construction of hospitals throughout the kingdom.

Monday, November 23, 2009

English Editing, ESL Instruction, Religious Writing and Surrealist Oil Paintings

ALL ABOUT ME! I'm taking stock of my successes (before turning 30) as well as amping up/strengthening a few of my personal projects. Check out some of the things that I'm working on:

1) I run an editing and proofreading website. If you need help editing a book, manuscript, essay paper, thesis or dissertation, please check it out at http://www.paper-perfect-editing.com

2) I'm an artist. My home site, featuring my surrealistic oil paintings, is http://www.derekmurphyart.com

3) I run an English Summer Camp in Taiwan. We focus on practical English and ESL conversation, fluency by providing an English Immersion Environment. See more at http://www.englishculturecommunity.com

4) Finally, I'm a writer/researcher. I focus on religion, history, and spirituality. I have a lot of articles, and some books, at my website http://www.holyblasphemy.net

Tuesday, November 17, 2009

Quality editing and proofreading for your English documents

I've redone my proofreading and editing site again; if you need editorial services, copy editing, proofreading or help for essays, papers, books, etc - I have the best prices around and offer great service:

http://www.paper-perfect-editing.com