 This exhibition, which is titled Between, picturing 1950s to 1960s Taiwan, is an exhibition that's curated by myself with a colleague from the National Museum. It's the first museum that was opened in post-war Taiwan, 1955. What's interesting about the exhibition is that it shows work by some artists who are quite well-known, such as painters, by the likes of Zhao Erda, for example, Xi Dejin. You can see some sketches of his here. But there's also work by quite well-known photographers, Deng Nanguan and also Cheng Shanxi. These are names that are very well-known in Taiwan, less well-known elsewhere, of course, and they're quite well-known for chronicling that period, which you'll see here in the exhibition. But then there's also work by artists that nowadays very little is known about pretty much throughout the 50s, 60s and 70s. Those decades were all characterized by a reasonably authoritarian rule, sometimes quite repressive. And that's, if you know a little bit more about Taiwanese history, that reality is sitting in the background of all the images that you'll see in the exhibition. We choose those collections, try to express the mixture of two cultures in 1950 to 1960s. Because in the 1950s, the nationalist government retreated from mainland China, and they brought Chinese culture to Taiwan. And at the time, Taiwan was under Japanese rule for 50 years, so they emerged into Japanese culture. So those works, they were expressed the features of the mixture of two cultures, Japanese culture and the Chinese culture. The work is primarily photography, like a documentary style photography, but the exhibition also includes some print work, woodblock prints, watercolors, and also pencil sketches, charcoal sketches. So there's everything from unknown artists to quite well known work as well.