A voyage to the northern border of Taiwan — the eponymous Beigu Islet, a sea rock roughly 28 squared meters submerged under water half of the time — delves into regional histories, the gaze on borderline landscapes, and the ambivalent state of Taiwanese territory and subjectivity.
A voyage to the northern border of Taiwan — the eponymous Beigu Islet, a sea rock roughly 28 squared meters submerged under water half of the time — delves into regional histories, the gaze on borderline landscapes, and the ambivalent state of Taiwanese territory and subjectivity.







