Shih Chieh Huang: Sculptures that’d be at home in the deep sea
หวางฉือเจี๋ย (ShihChieh Huang): ประติมากรรมที่อยู่ในบ้านใต้มหาสมุทร
Shih Chieh Huang doesn’t make art that’s meant to be admired from afar. He dissects and disassembles the detritus of our lives—household appliances, lights, computer parts, toys—and transforms them into surreal experiences. Full bio
Double-click the English transcript below to play the video.
ทุกครั้งที่ผมไป
ตอนเขาไม่อยู่บ้าน
that work with body parts.
ที่ทำงานกับส่วนต่าง ๆ ของร่างกาย
โดยการใช้หมวกกันน็อก
people to wear the helmet
of another piece being made.
ที่ถูกสร้างขึ้น
ทุกๆ สองปี หรือสามปี
ธรรมชาติแห่งชาติ
way they look, the way they feel.
และผิวสัมผัสของเค้า
work in many different ways,
ให้งานของผมในหลายทาง
together and see what happens.
8000 ตารางฟุต
and some resting on the floor.
บางอันวางอยู่ที่พื้น
และมหัศจรรย์ได้อย่างไร
ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Shih Chieh Huang - ArtistShih Chieh Huang doesn’t make art that’s meant to be admired from afar. He dissects and disassembles the detritus of our lives—household appliances, lights, computer parts, toys—and transforms them into surreal experiences.
Why you should listen
Shih Chieh Huang has one goal with his art: to create experiences for people to explore. He finds inspiration for his work from some highly unusual sources: a bioluminescent fish, a garbage bag, even his belly button.
A TED Fellow, Shih Chieh Huang grew up in Taiwan, where he enjoyed discovering strange objects in his local night market. He developed a passion for taking apart everyday objects and transforming them into something new. These experiences—as well as a fellowship at the Smithsonian Institute studying bioluminescent organisms—deeply inform his work.
Shih Chieh Huang has created a helmet that records the movement of the eye, and then uses the blinks to turn on and off a nightlight. He’s also used similar mechanisms to send glowing water pumping through tubes. His most recent work, however, takes plastic bottles, garbage bags and other everyday items and transforms them into gigantic sculptures that move and light up—as if they were actual sea creatures.
Shih Chieh Huang | Speaker | TED.com