Nowness Series: Current 2012 : a social disrupter to create collaborations

At a recent residency at Platform China, Beijing, my husband Matthew Wild (who is a French trained chef) and myself, hosted a dinner party early on in the residency. We invited a diverse range of people we wanted to meet in Beijing. These included prominent Chinese artists, business people, chinese TV personalities, western artists and the Australian ambassador to China. The guests were seduced to the event by the thought of food and wine. Inspired by the work of Lygia Clarke, and the positive social aspirations of the Fluxus group (in particular Yoko Ono) we also invited 5 seamstresses. Slowly, over the seven courses, the seamstresses sewed the guests together tracking the emotional connections of the conversation. The performances uses food and thread to evoke a social sculpture. Over dinner, as the guests are seduced by food, conversations begin. As the guests engage with each other, the seamstress marks the connection via sewing their clothes together. As the dinner progresses, the stitching becomes tighter and more tense. The dinner table becomes a physical web of emotional connections, physically highlighting our communications. Accelerated intimacy and insecurities erupt, collaborations and friendships form.

Accelerated Intimacy

The dinner table became a physical web of emotional connections. Accelerated intimacy (and insecurities) erupted, great conversation were catalyzed and friendships formed.

The aim is to highlight our interconnectedness, and how the people around us shape how we think and feel. We hope the event will disrupt habitual communication strategies we usually adhere to. For audiences and those involved, the works will feel interventional, intimate and thought-provoking, transforming public spaces and everyday actions into art experiences.


 

Feedback from the seamstresses:

Yang Rui:

As the participants are involved in the whole work, it reflects the relationships between different individuals and, people and the society. The course of sewing shows not only the communication  between the people at the table, but also shows the communication between the eaters and the seamstresses, which, let us think about more of the relationships in this world. I feel so happy to be involved and become clearer and clearer to understanding the meaning of this work.

Ji Fei:

First, I feel pleasure to attend this activity, this is the first time for me to be involved in such a video or installation project(work), which enables me to have a deep understanding of the artist’s initial meaning. To me, it just like an entrance to the contemporary art for me. It provides me a way to change my personal view—from a people involved as a seamstress to an outsider, you know, I can really feel two roles in this artwork.

As part of the audience and part of the involved people, I saw people talking, laughing and exciting when I was sewing. Also, in my action, I mean during my sewing, I interrupted their talking and even thoughts, I think this shows how fragile the world could be, because even a simple string can interrupted their normal eating and talk, and everything is posited in a world that filled with different kind of interruption. And when these interruptions added together, it may even ruin the whole.

Yang Ru:

It’s my honor to be involved in this artwork which enables me to understand the meaning of this activity. As the sewing become faster and faster and tighter and tighter, the people’s reactions at the table varies a lot: from slowly tasting the food to feeling hard to get the food, from simple conversation to singing at a high volume, from simply sitting at the table to trying to break the constraint, from people starting to know each other to more familiar and intimate with each other, these all happened along the course when the seamstresses sewing them together.

I feel it reflects a truth that: to enjoy the freedom from the constraint, and to accept the constraint from the freedom, this is life.

Julia Fu (Fu Lang):

It was an exciting night and I really enjoyed it, not only with the sewing, but also the whole atmosphere.

We planned our sewing carefully, from the changing of the length of the string, to the speed of the action, and every little change could change and interrupt the people at the table at last obviously. I think the meaning of this work is very clear, and people can also have different ways to read it, but I would like to say something impressed me most, I mean, the reaction of the eaters(the people at the table). They wanted to use the lighter to burn the strings, they suddenly realized that they were sewn by the strings and lose the freedom, they protested the lost of freedom, and they tried many ways to break the string net, and finally moved out from the table to get freedom, all this shows people’s eagerness to freedom. Also, as a seamstress, I find that the more they talk or the communication went on, the more constraint they got, so was that show the same as what the Chinese saying goes: “Don’t speak too much, since too much talk will bring you troubles”? However, people nowadays seem more like to fight against this kind of control rather than just surrender to it.

In fact, what tight the people together is not the string but their communication and friendship, that is really interesting.

Performance:

Dinner with Laurens Tan and others, food by Matt Wild, Beijing.

Funding:

Asialink residency, Platform China



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Nowness Series: percolate, 2011

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Yoke 2012/16