Showing posts with label interview. Show all posts
Showing posts with label interview. Show all posts

20151101

ocean hero

Ecozine summer edition 2015


within two hours we find 246 shoes. a friend of mine and me are on a beautiful beach in south lantau. we're by ourselves except a fisherman on a rock in the far distance. the beach is filled with white sand and embraced by big bleached boulders on both sides. the water is clear and soft waves fill the air with a calming swoosh. a black kite is soaring high above us. on the horizon small islands are in a misty blur. for thousands of years chinese artists have captured this serenity of nature on paper. these ink scrolls are called 山水. literally 山 means mountain and 水 means water, translated as 'landscape'. for thousands of years this landscape has not changed. but starting 50 years ago a third element, man-made,  has entered the picture: plastic. our civilization will be remembered by this element, because it lasts hundreds maybe thousands of years. we do not know the exact durability because we are in this experiment for the first time ever. 
500 years ago leonardo da vinci drew a picture called 'le proporzioni del corpo umano secondo vitruvio'. it depicts a beautiful man in a circle with his arms and legs stretched out and free. it is the artist's observation of the proportions of the human body and the translation of those natural measurements into architecture. nature was the artist's paradigm for the creation of beauty. today we still possess this tremendous creative power. the centre of the circle is the human navel: all comes from within us, imagined by the human mind, materialized by human hands. yet today we cannot move freely anymore. lying in this circle of marine litter i feel like lying in a body cast. we have created an avalanche of material beauty that has gotten out of hands. we have created a reality in which we cannot swim in the sea anymore, because it is full of trash. we cannot eat fish anymore because it is contaminated. we cannot appreciate the horizon anymore because it is blurred by smog. we believe that we need 'things' to make life easier, more comfortable, essentially happier. and this surely is true to some extend, but today we have lost the sense of proportion! do we really need 20 pairs of shoes in our closet? do we really need bottled water from the other end of the globe for lunch? rather than working to earn the money to buy another pair of shoes, would it not be wonderful to spend that time walking barefoot on a beautiful beach? rather than drinking sterilized water from a plastic bottle would it not be wholesome to drink cool fresh water from a mountain stream? 
the relation of man and nature is what da vinci captured ingeniously in his drawing 500 years ago. this relationship has never changed. we are still striving for a balanced and harmonious life. for me personally nature is the answer. all of what we are looking for is already here. it is just outside of our civilized reality, waiting for us to arrive. now.


this portrait is called 'out of proportion' and is part of the series 'trash-land-art / 垃圾山水'. 

20151002

Premiere of documentary-movie "垃圾山水 / Landscape of Rubbish"

I'm excited to invite you to the premiere of the 20 minutes documentary 
"垃圾山水 / Landscape of Rubbish"
by Taiwanese film-maker You-Xue Lin

on October 18th at 13:30 at "Fuzhong 15" Cinema in New Taipei City

Please watch the trailer: 


20140630

article in south china morning post














SCMP on june 25th 2014
it's a small picture on the front page, but still it's the front page! here's an article in the south china morning post about environmental artists in hongkong: monti lai, benjamin hao and me. how we work, where we find challenges in this metropolis and what's driving us to do what we do. the full article by kate whitehead is online:

scmp.com/lifestyle/arts-culture/article/1537044/medium-message-small-group-green-artists

to enlarge article double-click on picture 

20140319

an interview

This is the full length interview I gave for stylebyasia.com beginning of the month with photos taken by teschka.com:


You have a degree in fashion design, what made you leave the industry and become an artist?
Ever since I'm a child I like making things. It is intoxicating to see things become reality that have only existed in your imagination before. But does it still make sense to make things in a society that has more than enough? When still working in the fashion industry, I was visiting one of the production factories in Guan Dong for quality control. In one of the rooms young adults were assembling handbags. The air was filled with the fumes of glue, there was no proper air ventilation, the lighting was poor, all of the facts we know so well from the media. But what shocked me were not these inadequate working conditions. What shocked me were seeing these young adults being self-confident and independent, with fashionable clothes, latest hair styles and smart phones. This instant revealed to me that it is ourselves who are creating our very own cravings. These young people were literally making the very handbags they were saving money for. It became clear to me then that I didn't want to fuel that cycle of mindless consumerism anymore. I had the choice to step out of that cycle and I took it. 
What made you study fashion-design in the first place then?
My mother is a textile designer and I was surrounded by materials and the humming of a sewing machine ever since I can remember. All of my family are either artists or craftsmen. As a child the paintings on the walls were my great grandfather's, the storybooks were illustrated by my grandmother, the chairs designed by my uncle and the clothes I was wearing were made by my mom. So I guess applying at an art academy was the only thing to do. If I had asked to study law or anything slightly more conservative they probably would have thrown a fit. Basically I was not making up my mind but just following the family tradition. Studying a design major was limiting for me though. My creations always turned out either like paintings or like sculptures.


Why did you choose waste as a material to work with?
I like finding things. Things man-made as well as natural. It is more about this idea of finding, about being open and receptive to my environment, to the things that surround me. Waste is just a part of this idea. Everything that I find talks to me, it is almost like the objects are finding me and not the other way around. 
Wording it differently: What story does the waste in your art tell?
It is a direct reflection of our materialistic society. Every single piece tells a story of how we live, what we crave for, what our habits are, what we value and what we waste. 'Show me your waste and I tell you who you are' is a sentence that came to my mind once when working on an installation. I'm not really changing anything. I'm not colouring or altering the found objects in any way. The only thing I do is to rearrange the waste in a system of colour gradation, size and material coordination. And by doing so I change our perception of the very same objects into something visually beautiful. But of course it's still the same rubbish. With the big difference that now the viewer is pulled into the story and has to reflect on it.


How do you think living in HK has affected your art?
I think Hong Kong hasn't actually influenced my art that much. Generalizing things Hong Kong is a city that's shiny and new, fast-paced and money-driven. On the contrary I'm interested in old things, used things, in things that tell a story, that tell time. I can see so much beauty and value in the mundane. My works are time-consuming to make and made from 'worthless' materials like waste or leaves that wither within a short period of time. It's quite funny, because these values couldn't be less Hong Kong. But that doesn't mean I don't like it here! In a way I'm grateful that Hong Kong doesn't give me a lot of input. That way I need to focus on myself and look inside for inspiration.
 Are there any artists with whom you identify?
There are a lot of artists who I feel kinship with. Tim Knowles, Jacob Dahlgren, Susumu Koshimizu are all artists I admire for their critical, sensitive yet humorous approach to reality. They are creating great works on the outside as well as on the inside. Along with their strong concepts these artists succeed in making works that are just as stunning visually.  Then there are street artists like Swoon. I love the ephemerality and vulnerability of her work. Another great street artist is Banksy of course. It's the direct and spontaneous way street art responds to people's everyday life and the freedom that comes from trespassing boundaries of perception that I relate to.  

What is your goal as an artist?
That's a difficult question! I want to touch others through my work. It can be puzzling, pleasing, disturbing or all of it at the same time. I accept anything but indifference. I want to get deeper than the surface. Personally my goal is to become more true, more honest with myself. To become more myself if that makes sense. And to express that authenticity in my work. I'm constantly trying to find a visual language for my inner reality, turning my inner world outward. It is a very personal journey. No one knows the next step except myself. No one can tell me what to do next. It feels like a slippery path sometimes, because you never know if you will be understood. You never know if it is enough.
What project are you currently working on? 
At the moment I'm working on an installation called '垃圾排檔 / lost'n'found'  for Ocean Art Walk 2014. I came up with a hawker stall filled entirely with waste washed ashore on Hong Kong beaches. From afar this stall will look like a rainbow. Coming closer people will notice that the objects 'for sale' are actually all waste: bottle caps, broken toys, twigs, old shoes, leaves, plastic bottles etc. Each of the found objects will be labeled with a price tag, which does not state a number in dollars but a mental state, e.g. 'awareness' or 'responsibility'. Visitors will be able to 'buy' single pieces in exchange for their personal interpretation of the word. Ocean Art Walk will open on 12th of April in Stanley. I'll post more details on my blog closer to the date. 

All photos by teschka.com

20140224

'plastique plague' by the pearl report

the pearl report has done a documentary about people who take action against plastic pollution in hongkong. please follow this link to watch (it's in english this time:)
http://mytv.tvb.com/news/pearlreport/171826#page-1

tracey read, founder of plasticfreeseas.org is the one person in hongkong who follows up the case of plastic pollution with perseverance, enthusiasm and solutions. my deepest respect for your activism, tracey! as you say 'if we don't change our behaviour, we will be cleaning up beaches forever!'  another ngo featured is livinglamma.org with their amazingly efficient campaign 'brand on the beach'. this campaign registers products that make up most of marine pollution and then targets the companies responsible for these products. and starting from 12:00mins there's me, showing a global problem from the artistic angle, showing waste as something valuable ... enough said now, please watch yourself!


20130418

'time being' - a short tour


thank you. thanks to everyone who came yesterday and shared this special moment with me: it was the first time that i filled an entire gallery with my soul, and the first time in hongkong to actually say: hello here i am! 
this is a short video for all those who couldn't make it to my exhibition. 
thanks especially to kate and abid who are running the beautiful timeandspace.hk gallery. a big thank you also to lillian and betsy from winenthingshk.com for the sparkly and the perfect service. and thanks without words to my husband who gives me the inner and outer space to persue the art that is in my heart. and to my chilrden who try their best to do the same.