Show simple item record

dc.date.accessioned2021-04-18T16:48:13Z
dc.date.available2021-04-18T16:48:13Z
dc.date.issued2019
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/2077/68274
dc.language.isoengsv
dc.subjectMaterial culturesv
dc.subjectwearable adornmentsv
dc.subjecttransnationalismsv
dc.subjectnomadismsv
dc.subjectidentitysv
dc.subjectparticipatory performancesv
dc.subjectjewellery artsv
dc.subjectmemorabiliasv
dc.titleHELPERS CHANGING HOMESsv
dc.type.svepartistic work
dc.contributor.creatorOyama, Yuka
art.typeOfWorkVideo Curated exhibition (online due to COVID-19)sv
art.relation.publishedInCritical Costume Exhibition 2020: Costume Agencysv
art.description.projectDuring my artist residency in Wellington, New Zealand, I sought to portray individual views about how a handful of portable personal objects help people to make a sense of home. I conducted qualitative interviews with thirty adults, who have moved around multiple nations both voluntarily and involuntarily. My interviews focused on the interviewees’ relationships to small objects that moved around with them to all locations in order to understand the following two aspects in depths. Firstly, I investigated persons’ individual methods that they have mastered that helped them to make any place their home. Secondly, I studied how notions of “home” are defined after relocating multiple times, which for many of them will continue. After conducting interviews, I created a portrait of each person as a shelter resembling their objects made out of cardboard boxes. In the next step, I commemorated the experiences of my interviewees in a symbolic way. I orchestrated a filmed performance, where they enacted movements of a hermit crab, a creature who regularly swaps its shell–or home—for a new one in order to grow. As documentation, I scanned the sculptural objects as well as the interviewees’ bodies and made pendants that represented their personal homes. By doing so, I wanted to give a piece of extremely personal jewellery piece that crystalizes the person’s heritage and the past experiences of uprooting, which can accompany her/him in the future. The project is now leading to a second iteration that also focuses on oral history with interviews conducted in late 2020 specifically of teenagers who live between multiple homes.sv
art.description.summaryHELPERS CHANGING HOMES is a project that investigates the multifarious definitions of homes and how small objects help to make any place a home, especially for those whose lives are nomadic or frequently uprooted. “What makes a place your home? How do you conceptualize this, if home is constantly changing? How do you fill the void of a home you have moved away from?”sv
art.description.supportedByThe Dowse Art Museum, Wellington, New Zealand The School of Creative Arts at the Massey University, Wellington, NZ Asia Pacific Art Foundations, NZ Goethe Institute, Berlin Allied Pickfords, Wellington, NZ Wellington City Council, Wellington, NZ Hell’s Pizza, Wellington, NZsv
art.relation.urihttps://exhibition.costumeagency.com/sv
art.relation.urihttps://costumeagency.com/sv


Files in this item

Thumbnail

This item appears in the following Collection(s)

Show simple item record