Becoming A Bird

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Welcome to Taipei and TNUA — September 2018

I’ve arrived in Taiwan for my five-month Fulbright adventure, and I’m staying just outside the city at Taipei University of the Arts, in a guest room on a very beautiful campus. The buildings climb up a hill overlooking mountains and a wetlands river basin, with dramatic views of Taipei—including what was once the world’s tallest building. When I leave the university, a shuttle bus takes me to an efficient subway line for a 30-45 minute trip into town. (This is similar to but easier than my commute at home.)

My first sight from the airport taxi of my new home—though most signs are only in Mandarin characters!

Art University view from a Sculpture area to the Guest House, where my spacious room is on the 3rd floor

Looking out from the Guest House toward misty mountains and parts of extended New Taipei City

The peaceful view across Guandu Plain toward Taipei’s towers and teeming streets

I’ve been exploring all manner of museum art, Buddhist and folk temples, city sights both shiny and gritty, and the beauties of birds, plants, landscape—and food! I’m lucky to have a large temple and two sculpture sites near me, at Guandu Nature Park and Bamboo Curtain Studio. I can also see many kinds of birds—Taiwan is a destination for bird-watching—another focus of my project. All in all it’s a great location for me, especially as the steamy September heat cools down a bit in October and the air is clearer here on the mountainside.

Traditional market-sellers of vegetables, meats, and fruits outside a tiny local temple in nearby Zhuwei

Lively Longshan Temple, established in 1738, surrounded by glass towers and new construction

Typical back-street view at night in Taipei, with bicycles, motorbikes, lights, sounds, and smells

Carnival-like Night Markets are popular among both locals and tourists for sampling Taiwan’s famous street food

As I prepare to teach a compressed-semester workshop of one 6-hour afternoon a week for 9 weeks, I’m also reaching out and meeting people in various fields. I always ask what they know about human-bird connections in art, religion, or myth in Taiwan’s mixed cultures and many indigenous groups. So I’ve been collecting many stories and references to follow up!