Liu Bolin: The invisible man
劉勃麟: 隱形人
Beijing-based artist Liu Bolin silently comments on modern sociopolitical conditions by disappearing into his art. Full bio
Double-click the English transcript below to play the video.
我用這個作品來表達我的抗議,
以及藝術創作自由的關注。
它是指離開工作崗位,
轉型過程中失去工作崗位的這些人。
工作生活了一輩子的廢棄的車間裏面。
但其實,在這兒隱藏的
他们只是被隱形了。
將在未來的幾十年内消失。
我會更注重思想的表達。
我消失在這兒
(笑).
桶裝速食麵品牌的外包裝裏
拍這件作品時所穿的衣服,
不同文字的雜誌裏。
藝術家的態度最重要。
生命掙扎就會成爲藝術作品,
ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Liu Bolin - ArtistBeijing-based artist Liu Bolin silently comments on modern sociopolitical conditions by disappearing into his art.
Why you should listen
Artist Liu Bolin began his "Hiding in the City" series in 2005, after Chinese police destroyed Suo Jia Cun, the Beijing artists' village in which he'd been working, because the government did not want artists working and living together. With the help of assistants, he painstakingly painted his clothes, face, and hair to blend into the background of a demolished studio.
Since then, the so-called "Invisible Man" has photographed himself fading into a variety of backgrounds all over Beijing. Spot him embedded in a Cultural Revolution slogan painted on a wall, or spy him within tiers of supermarket shelves stocked with soft drinks. Just as with Bolin himself, the contradictions and confusing narratives of China's post-Cultural Revolution society are often hiding in plain sight.
Liu Bolin | Speaker | TED.com