Artist's Statement
Both
elegant and mundane elements compose my sculptures: silks, food
wrappers, newspapers, and plastic produce netting. The sculptures
explore the pulling apart and reassembling of modern day artifacts.
I am fascinated by the resulting textures and colliding and merging
stories. Many of these gatherings of fragments are inspired by
family stories of plantation era Hawaii in which my grandmother
and father grew. Fixed in my imagination are tales of paper apple
wrappers folded into kimonos for dolls and stories of blankets
sewn of hundreds of tiny tobacco bags. Toy boats were made of
leaves and pinwheels of flowers. Thriftiness and creativity mingled
in wonderful harmony.
I
often incorporate food wrappers familiar from childhood visits
to Hawaii. My family was always greeted by Japanese relatives
with Hawaiian leis made of Chinese snacks ("crack seed"). My work
reflects on this intersection of cultures. The collage assembly
also reveals a fragmented knowledge of Japanese culture filtered
through the cloudy prism of generations. Scraps of modern Japan
in the form of manga, wrappers and throw away containers are hand
stitched and glued into my patchwork sculptures. Japan's variety
of purely disposable plastic products strikes me as a fascinatingly
foreign. They could only arise in a Japan jarred from the thrifty
Meji Era of my family's collective memory by both war and industrialization.
By knitting together disposable cultural artifacts with the spirit
of reuse preserved from earlier generations, my work muses on
the evolution of cultures in their homeland and in Diaspora. I
attempt to abstractly voice muted memories and pay respect to
creativity born of necessity. Most recently, my work is exploring
the intersection of cultures in the San Jose area by incorporating
food wrappers from various ethnic groups.
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