All posts by george

Femininity, Vectorized

November 8, 2017 2017年11月8日

Yuschav Arly is a graphic designer and digital illustrator from Bali, Indonesia. After half a decade in the graphic design world, he now primarily focuses on digital illustration. His stunning, vector portraits of women are minimalistic and clean, yet elegant and full of restrained emotion.


Yuschav Arly是来自印度尼西亚巴厘岛的平面设计师和数码插画家。他曾在平面设计行业工作5年,现在主要专注于插画创作。他所创作的女性矢量肖像画令人赞叹,风格简约利落又优雅,更蕴含着饱满的情绪。

Arly’s creative process is simple – it involves a lot of procrastination along with some coffee and music in a comfortable place. “Daydreaming is always my first step,” he says. “It’s basically making a finished artwork but just in my head. Once I get a full picture, I grab my pen and do a rough sketch in my notebook, but with a little description just so I don’t forget about the initial idea. And after that, it’s just long, fun hours with a pen tool and eraser.”


Arly的创作过程很简单——大量的拖延、咖啡、音乐和一个舒适的地方。他说,“第一步,是做白日梦。基本上,做白日梦就是在完成这件作品,但只是在我的脑海里完成。一旦有完整的画面后,我就会拿起笔,在笔记本上画一个草图,加上一点备注描述,以防我忘记了自己最初的想法。在这之后,就是用笔刷工具和橡皮擦进行数小时的创作。”

Drawing from diverse sources such as illustration, photography, modeling, architecture, and design, Arly’s images make use of clean shapes and lines to frame his subjects and their surroundings. With elegant women, symmetrical compositions, and muted tones being the common denominators throughout his work, Arly humbly describes his creative process as simply piecing all of these different elements together. “It’s all connected somehow in a mysterious way when I start to visualize an image,” he says. “It’s like playing a game of Connect the Dots.”


Arly的创作灵感来源很丰富,包括插画、摄影、模特、建筑、设计等,他通过极简的形状和线条来构设人物主题和周遭环境。优雅的女性、对称的构图、柔和的色调,成为他作品的共同特征。Arly谦虚地描述了他的创作过程就是简单地将所有这些不同的元素拼凑在一起。“当我要将这些灵感变成一幅插画时,它们会以某种神秘的方式连接在一起,这就好像是一个连点成画的游戏一样。”

Instagram: @yuschav
Behance: ~/yuschav

 

Contributor: George Zhi Zhao


Instagram@yuschav
Behance~/yuschav

 

供稿人: George Zhi Zhao

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Long Time, No See

November 7, 2017 2017年11月7日

Long time, no see is a series from Zack Vitiello, a Toronto-based photographer who travels to China frequently for his job as creative director of the lifestyle fashion brand Vitaly. Shot entirely on 35mm film, the series highlights the sense of otherworldliness that Vitiello experiences when he travels to China. The graininess of the analog film helps convey a sense of distance and alienation, feelings that the photographer often experiences in these places that he so often visits.


《Long time, no see》是多伦多摄影师Zack Vitiello的一个摄影系列作品,作为生活时尚品牌Vitaly的创意总监,他经常要去中国出差。这一系列完全采用35mm胶片相机拍摄,突显出了Vitiello在中国旅行时所体验到的陌生感,胶片的颗粒感有助于传达摄影师在他经常到访的地方所感受到的那种距离感和疏离感。

Describing the series, Vitiello says, “Long time, no see attempts to capture the feeling that I experience every time I visit Shenzhen, Guangzhou, and the surrounding area for biannual manufacturing trips. Images of empty restaurants with stacks of unused chairs, stark buildings with dark windows, and deserted street scenes give off a feeling of denseness and loneliness simultaneously. By not including any people in the photos, I hope that the viewer will feel a similar sense of alienation to that experienced when visiting a country as vast, unknowable, and remarkably interesting as China.”


跟我们介绍这一系列时,Vitiello说:“《Long time, no see》试图捕捉住我每两年去深圳、广州和周边地区的生产商出差时所体验到的感觉。照片上,空荡荡的餐厅里堆满闲置的椅子,荒置的大楼里窗户黑漆一片,还有冷冷清清的街道,这些场景同时给人一种密集和孤独的感觉。通过拍摄没有任何人物的照片,我希望观众能从照片上感受到,那种去到像中国这样广阔、充满未知和有趣的国家时,所体验到的疏离感。”

Instagram: @latelight

 

Contributor: George Zhi Zhao


Instagram: @latelight

 

供稿人: George Zhi Zhao

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Searching for the Self

October 23, 2017 2017年10月23日

Yuqing Zhu is a Chinese American artist, writer, and Ph.D. student in neuroscience at the University of Chicago. Using materials including pencil, chiyogami paper, origami paper, and magazine cut-outs, Zhu creates colorful self-portraits that examine the nature of identity and culture. Neocha spoke with Zhu to learn more about her life, art, and studies. Check out the conversation below.


朱禹清(Yuqing Zhu)是一名美籍华裔艺术家和作家,目前在芝加哥大学攻读神经学博士学位。通过铅笔、千代纸(Chiyogami)、折纸、杂志上剪下的图片等材料,她创作了一系列彩色自画像,以此对自我身份和文化本质进行审视。Neocha和朱禹清聊了一下,进一步去了解她的生活、艺术和学业。一起来看下这段对话吧。

Neocha: As a neuroscience student, how do you balance your art with your academic studies?

Zhu: Before beginning my program, someone told me that finding a hobby as soon as possible is the best way to keep sane. Luckily for me, I already had something. I think the key to finding balance was by assigning equal importance to both art and science. It’s truly a matter of mindset. I’m serious enough about neuroscience to be part of a five-year-plus Ph.D. program, so it’s quite a struggle to match that level of dedication in my art! I may need to spend more time in lab or in lecture, simply due to the nature of the work, but I try to think about and create art consistently as well.

Some days I recognize that I’ve been neglecting creating art for too long. On those days I simply put down my science and draw. This usually rejuvenates my work on the science side as well. Scientific research can devolve into a lot of drudgery and grunt work but doing something creative reminds me to think broadly and reassess where I’m at. My most inspired periods in the lab usually match up with my most productive periods at the easel.


Neocha: 作为一名神经科学的学生,你如何平衡自己的艺术创作与学业?

Zhu: 在我开始修读学位之前,有人劝我尽快找个爱好,这是让自己保持理智的最佳方式。幸运的是,我早就有这样的爱好。我觉得,找到平衡的关键是对艺术和科学赋予同等的重要性。这确实就是心态的问题。我对于学神经科学是很认真的,所以才会决心读一个5年多的博士学位课程,所以要在艺术方面也投入同等的专注,确实不容易。我可能会花更多的时间在实验室或上课,主要是因为这个专业本身的需要,但我会尽量保持不断地去思考和创造艺术。

有些时候当我发现自己太长时间没有进行艺术创作时,我会先把学习放在一边,去画画。这样一来,我在科学学习时也会有更多新的能量。科学研究常常需要做很多苦差事和繁重的体力劳动,所以进行一些创意创作可以提醒自己想得更广,重新评估自己的位置。我在实验室受启发最多的时候,往往也是我艺术创作最多产的时期。

Neocha: What are some of the parallels between art and neuroscience?

Zhu: I’ve had a lot of people ask me this question, and I’m not sure if I can give a satisfactory answer even to myself! Here’s my shot at it: art and science are both parts of an abstract search for the balance between beauty and complexity. Self-portraiture and neuroscience are both parts of an abstract search of the core of one’s identity beyond one’s own biases.

I adore complexity. It wasn’t always obvious that the complex system I wanted to study was the brain. I used to, and still do actually, love things like M. C. Escher’s prints and delight in the extremely dense inkwork of Edward Gorey and more recently of Manabu Ikeda. Complex interactions in anything from ecology to musical scores are still fascinating to me.

A lot of times neurobiology gives you extremely elegant solutions to complex problems. How do we hear? How do entire nervous systems develop from embryonic stages into adulthood? How can we sense things like temperature, and how do we perceive things like colors? When systems like these come to be understood and explained, we realize how logically elegant they are! That doesn’t mean the solutions are simple or straightforward or even the most efficient, but nonetheless, they work, and I find them beautiful! A large part of the time we don’t know the full answer yet. For me, the process for finishing a work of art is the same as for finding a piece of evidence in the framework of a scientific theory.


Neocha: 艺术与神经科学之间有什么相似之处?

Zhu: 已经有很多人问过我这个问题,即使是回答自己,我也不确定可不可以给出一个满意的答复!不过我可以试一下。艺术和科学都属于为寻找美丽和复杂性之间的平衡而作出的一种抽象性探索。自画像与神经科学都属于为寻找一种超越自己偏见、核心的自我身份认知而作出的一种抽象性探索。

我崇拜复杂性。以前我没搞清楚原来自己一直想研究的复杂系统就是大脑。我以前(现在也仍然)很喜欢M. C. Escher的版画,Edward Gorey以及最近很喜欢的池田学(Manabu Ikeda)他们那些极其细腻的钢笔画。从生态学到乐谱,任何事物间复杂的相互作用对我来说都充满魅力。

很多时候,神经生物学可以给你一个极其优雅的答案,来回答复杂的问题。我们是怎么听声音的?整个中枢神经系统如何从胚胎阶段发展到成年期?我们如何能感觉到温度,或者我们如何感知色彩?当我们能够理解和解释这些系统时,我们会意识到,它们有着多么优雅的逻辑!这并不意味着它们所提供的答案是简单的、直接的,也不是最有效率的,但它们是行得通的,而且我觉得很有美感!大部分的时间,我们还未知道全部的答案。对我来说,完成一件艺术品的过程与在某个科学理论的框架里又找到一块证据是一样的。

Neocha: Expanding on that, are there any other similarities between the creative process for art versus science?

Zhu: I think the creative process is crucial for good science. You can’t create good art or do good science by being dogmatic about it. Scientific research is all about finding something new that’s never been known before. Art is about creating something that has not existed in the world before. Paradigm shifts occur in science as well as in art! New movements emerge when individuals dare to look at things in vastly different ways. The move from geocentrism to heliocentrism, from Lamarckian inheritance to Darwinian evolution (and now to a complex epigenetics that is beyond me), all happened because scientists dared to think differently!


Neocha: 进一步说,科学与艺术创作的过程之间有其它的相似之处吗?

Zhu: 艺术创作的过程对于进行科学研究也是关键。如果太过于教条主义,你不能创作出好的艺术,也不能进行很好的科学研究。科学研究就是要寻找人们未知的新事物。而艺术是要创造出世界上之前并不存在的事物。范式转变在科学和艺术上都会发生!当个体敢以截然不同的方式看待事情时,就会催生新的运动出现。从地心说到日心说的转变,从拉马克获得性遗传到达尔文的进化论(再到现在超越我理解的复杂的表观遗传学)的发展,都是因为有科学家敢于从不同角色思考而发生的!

Neocha: What does your personal creative process usually look like?

Zhu: The process of creating a portrait is very straightforward. I can pull up a piece of paper and simply start drawing. Sometimes I’ll draw myself without much thought. Those are usually sketches to be filed away. Other times a specific idea will come to mind, and I’ll act on it. I like to finish pieces in one long breath – I’ll think of something as I eat breakfast and by the time I go to sleep that night it’ll be finished. Of course, I usually don’t spend that whole stretch of time literally drawing. Almost every portrait involves a little bit of research about the historical period I’m assuming in my clothing or looser web browsing for inspiration and references.

I’m terrible about finishing something that I started on a different day. I guess it’s possibly because when I wake up the next morning I feel like a brand new self and the half-finished piece no longer has power as a part of me. I rarely sit and ponder or actively brainstorm for a portrait. The pieces fall together as I work.


Neocha:你艺术创作的过程一般是怎样的?

Zhu:创作画像的过程很简单。拿出一张纸,我就开始画画。有时我会画自己,也不会想太多。那些一般只是一些蓝图,很快就放在一边去了。其它时候,如果突然想到一个特定的想法,我就会将这个想法画下来。我喜欢一口气完成几幅画,可能我吃早餐的时候有了一些想法,然后到我那天晚上去睡觉前就可能已经创作出来。当然,我不会真的一整天一直画个不停。在画每一张画像前,我几乎都会先对画像中预想的服装造型所涉及到的年代进行一点研究,或是随意地上网浏览,来找灵感和参考。

我很怕要去画完我前一天开始的作品!可能是因为,当我第二天醒来的时候,会感觉自己已经是一个全新的自我,之前创作了一半的画已经不再是我的一部分,也失去了它原本的力量。我很少会特意坐下来去思考,或进行头脑风暴,来想如何创作一幅肖像画。通常我一边工作的时候就一边想好了应该怎样进行创作。

Neocha: How does heritage influence your work?

Zhu: I try to learn as much as I can about something before I incorporate it as a facet of my portraits. This is especially important for Chinese history – if I don’t understand something sufficiently (it’s the science researcher’s mindset), I feel like a fraud, like I’m wearing a “Chinese Halloween costume.” Sometimes I feel very far removed from China and its peoples and their rich history. Creating these self-portraits is a way to look at myself and see who I may be inside or the ancestors I contain.

The color palettes that I use are definitely inspired by the colors of modern metropolitan China as well as the dynastic past. Sometimes I have misgivings about using chiyogami. I try to pick patterns that are in common with traditional Chinese textiles and not ones that are uniquely Japanese since that culture is not part of my heritage. I got the idea of dressing my self-portraits from my paternal grandmother. She used to cut out patterned paper to decorate or altogether recreate scenes from children’s books, creating beautiful, intricate collages. Right now, I use a similar technique to what she did with tracing paper. I draw myself, get a rough sense of which collage elements I will need to overlay, and then use tracing paper in order to get the outlines exactly right. Then I use that as a stencil to cut shapes out of patterned paper.


Neocha: 你自身的文化背景如何影响你的作品?

Zhu: 在我将某种元素融入我的肖像画时,我都会先尽可能多地去了解它。尤其是关于中国的历史,如果我不能充分地了解某种事物(这是一种科学研究者的心态),我会感觉自己像个骗子,仿佛我披了一件“中国的万圣节服装”。有时,我会觉得自己与中国、中国人和他们丰富的历史隔得非常遥远。而创作这些自画像就变成一种审视自己的方式,让我去了解自己的内心,了解我所来自的文化。

我的色彩灵感来自现代中国的大都市和过去的王朝历史。有时,对于使用千代纸我也会有一些顾虑。我会尽量选用一些图案更贴近中国传统纺织品,而不是那些一看就是日本风格的千代纸,因为日本文化不属于我的文化背景。我后来想到了按照奶奶的打扮来画自画像。她以前常常用来剪出的图案纸装饰或重新设计儿童书籍中的场景,打造出错综复杂的美丽拼贴画。现在,我按照她的手法,在描图纸上创作。我通常先画出自画像,大概感觉下我可能需要怎样的拼贴元素,然后使用描图纸,获得正确的轮廓。然后用它作为模具,从图案纸上剪出形状。

Neocha: How have art and science changed your perception of self and identity?

Zhu: We are so, so biased in our conception of our brains because our thoughts can never escape them. Oftentimes, we fall into the trap of “this is so obvious,” when actually our firsthand experience is quite wrong. For example, our visual perception of the world is just a useful approximation of what is truly there. The perception of color – a biological representation of the electromagnetic spectrum across animal species – is the most fascinating thing to me (not to mention the phenomenon of consciousness, a taboo topic for most neuroscientists still). Working past, and sometimes outright rejecting the ideas that we hold based on our own brainy experiences is central to the practice of good neuroscience.

Self-portraiture is the exact same. We as individuals don’t, in fact, have an accurate idea of what we look like, much less of who we truly are. Someone once told me that, while I was pretty accurate at drawing other people, my own portraits were lacking. This was perhaps a year ago. That’s the point at which I began to draw myself in earnest and to strive for self-understanding and representational accuracy. I try to portray different aspects of what I understand as my actual self in my self-portraits. More and more, these are buried aspects – split open my face and what would you find? An octopus – an organism that is remarkably intelligent yet with an altogether alien nervous system. Do they operate at similar levels of cognition as humans? What would that mean in practice? Put my past in front of me, dress me in Qing Dynasty robes, and what do we have? The truth or still a self-distortion? As a young Chinese American, when I assume the attire of Communist-era China, am I connecting to my parents’ generation, or am I romanticizing a past that I do not have any true ownership of? These are questions I can’t yet answer.


Neocha: 艺术和科学如何改变你对自我和身份的看法?

Zhu: 我们大脑里的观念充满了偏见,因为我们的思想离不开大脑。很多时候我们掉进一些所谓“显而易见”的陷阱,但实际上,我们的亲身经验却是错的。例如,我们对世界的视觉感知只不过是真实世界的近似值。对色彩的感知——电磁频谱在动物物种间的生物表述——是对我来说最有趣的事情(更不用提“意识”这个在大多数神经科学家中仍然是禁忌话题的现象)。要进行有效的神经科学实践,我们要抛开,甚至直接否定这种我们根据自己自以为是的经验所得出的想法。

自画像也一样。作为个人,我们事实上并知道自己真实的样子,更不知道我们到底是谁。有人曾告诉我,虽然我画其他人的时候画得很像,但画自己就不是那么准确了。那大概是一年前的事情了。但从那时起,我才开始认真画自己,努力去理解自己,准确地描绘出自己。我试着从不同侧面,在我的自画像中描绘出我所理解的真正自我。慢慢地,我的笔下出现了越来越多那些曾被掩埋的一面,撕开我的脸,你会找到什么?章鱼是一种非常聪明的有机体,却有着人类完全陌生的中枢神经系统。它们的认知水平是不是跟人类类似?在实践中,这将意味着什么?将我的过去放在我的面前,让我穿上清朝的长袍,又会产生什么呢?是真相,还是依然只是扭曲的自我?作为一名年轻的美籍华人,当我穿上共产主义时代的中国装束时,我是让自己回到了我父母那个年代,还是在美化这种我并未真正拥有过的过去?这些都是我还无法回答的问题。

Website: yqzhu.com
Instagram: @yq_z

 

Contributor: George Zhi Zhao


网站: yqzhu.com
Instagram: @yq_z

 

供稿人: George Zhi Zhao

Mue Bon

October 17, 2017 2017年10月17日

 

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Mue Bon is a Bangkok-based street artist who works in painting, installation, and mixed media. As a member of Thailand’s early generation of street artists, Mue Bon began painting at a time when street art in his country was neither well known nor respected. Without creative agencies, big brands, or fine art galleries seeking out their skills, street artists were left with little financial incentive to continue their work. Regardless, Mue Bon continued creating work in the streets, motivated by his desire to elevate the status of street art in his country by making art accessible to the public.


Mue Bon是曼谷的街头艺术家,作品包括绘画、装置艺术和混合媒体作品。作为泰国早期一批的街头艺术家,Mue Bon刚开始创作时,泰国的街头艺术还不是很流行,也不是很受人们尊重。当时没有创意机构、大品牌或是美术画廊需要街头艺术,因此,街头艺术家的经济收入很低,很多人都没有动力继续创作。但Mue Bon一直坚持创作街头艺术至今,因为他希望通过向公众展示自己的作品,提升街头艺术在泰国的地位。

As street art became more popular in Thailand, businesses began to see commercial opportunities for street art collaborations. An impressive art piece on the wall meant that more customers and tourists would be attracted to the place of business. Mue Bon says, “The business owners would become curators too. They felt that, in a sense, this artwork belonged to them as well, because it was on their property. So they would be able to talk to their customers about street art, the artist, and the story behind the artwork. Even the lady selling fried bananas on the corner would become a street art curator.”


随着街头艺术在泰国越来越流行,商家开始看到了与街头艺术合作的商业机会。当企业的墙壁上出现一幅令人印象深刻的艺术作品,也就意味着会更多的顾客和游客被吸引这里来。Mue Bon说:“企业主也会成为策展人。他们觉得,从某种意义上说,这件作品属于他们,因为那是在他们的房子上的。因此,他们能够跟顾客聊街头艺术,聊艺术家和作品背后的故事。就连是在角落里卖炸香蕉的女摊主会可以成为街头艺术的策展人。”

Over the years, Mue Bon has created a cast of signature characters that he paints on the street and the canvas, including a cartoon bird, a girl behind a mask, and Mr. TV, a man with a television screen for a face. Despite their cute appearance, all of Mue Bon’s works contain commentary on social issues, including wealth disparity and inequality, the influence of media and propaganda, and anti-war activism. His iconic Mickey Mouse skull stickers and wheatpastes are the artist’s version of a memento mori – a reminder to find peace, meaning, and a sense of humor in the face of our inevitable mortality. Today, Mue Bon’s work can be seen not only throughout Thailand but has also made its way around the world.


多年来,Mue Bon在大街的墙上和画布上创造了一系列的角色,其中包括一只卡通鸟、戴面具的女孩和电视机先生(长着电视屏幕脸的男人)。虽然这些角色看上去很可爱,但Mue Bon的所有作品都传达着他对社会问题的看法,从贫富差距到社会不平等,从媒体和政治宣传的影响力到反战行动。他标志性的米老鼠头骨贴纸和糨糊贴纸是他的 memento mori (拉丁语,意为“记住你终有一死”),提醒着他去寻求和平,生命的意义,以及面对必然的死亡时依旧保持幽默。Mue Bon的作品如今已经在泰国和世界其它国家展出。

Mue Bon will hosting an upcoming solo exhibition in Tokyo, Japan opening on October 20th, 2017. See below for full details.


接下来,Mue Bon 将在东京举办个人作品展,开幕日为2017年10月20日。请参阅下面的详细细节。

Event:
SYSTEM ERROR!
Mue Bon Solo Exhibition in Tokyo

Address:
Megumi Ogita Gallery
2 Chome-16-12 Ginza
Chūō-ku, Tōkyō-to, Japan

Date:
October 20th to November 4th, 2017
11:00–19:00 (closed on Mon., Sun. & Public Holiday)
Opening Reception October 20th 18:00–20:00


活动:
《SYSTEM ERROR!》
Mue Bon 东京个人作品展

地址:
Megumi Ogita Gallery
日本东京都中央区
银座2丁目-16-12

日期:
2017年10月20日至11月4日
11:00-19:00(周一、周日及公共假期闭馆)
开幕酒会:10月20日,18:00-20:00

Website: muebon.com
Facebook: ~/bon.mue
Instagram: @mue_bon

 

Contributor & Videographer: George Zhi Zhao
Images Courtesy of Mue Bon


网站: muebon.com
Facebook: ~/bon.mue
Instagram: @mue_bon

 

视频摄影师与供稿人: George Zhi Zhao
图片由Mue Bon提供

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The Long Journey

October 16, 2017 2017年10月16日

Johan Chomet is a French photographer born in Paris. In 2013, he set out on The Long Journey, a series of travels that led him overland through Europe, Russia, Mongolia, China, Japan, Vietnam, Thailand, Myanmar, and Nepal. Most recently, Johan’s journey took him to Seoul, South Korea, where he captured a series of images that present his perspective of the city. Johan tells Neocha more about his work and his travels below.


Johan Chomet是来自法国巴黎的摄影师。2013年,他上了《The Long Journey》,进行了一场跨越欧洲、俄罗斯、蒙古、中国、日本、越南、泰国、缅甸和尼泊尔的漫长旅程。最近,Johan又去了韩国的首尔,在那里,他拍摄了许多照片,记录下他眼中的这座城市。Johan跟Neocha分享了许多关于他的作品与旅行的故事。

Neocha: What’s your process for planning your travels?

Johan: I never have a plan or route. I don’t try to organize anything in advance. I usually get transportation and visa sorted to my first destination and then take it from there. It gives me a lot more freedom as I don’t have to be somewhere at any specific time and can change my plans at the last minute if I feel like it. I also try not to have any time constraints.

Traveling overland is a totally different experience. You have to endure every kilometer of your trip, you have to find your way, and you have to deal with uneasy, sometimes unpleasant, situations. But you also get to live and share so much more. You see the landscapes changing and get to meet people along the way. To me, travel means freedom. It means adventures, meeting people, seeing things from a different perspective, and obviously photography! Travel and photography can hardly be separated for me.


Neocha: 你是怎样计划你的旅行的?

Johan: 我从来不会做计划或设计路线,我不喜欢提前计划好任何事情。我一般只会先把第一个目的地的交通和签证办好,然后就出发。这样我可以有更多的自由,因为我不需要在特定的时间到达某个特定的地方,也可以随时改变计划。我也尽量不给自己时间上的限制。

横越大陆的旅游是完全不同的体验。你不得不忍受旅行时每一公里的路途,你必须找到方向,你要处理一些不安,甚至令人不愉快的情况。但你也能够有丰富的生活体验,可以分享更多。你可以看到沿途风景的变化,一路认识新的朋友。对我来说,旅行意味着自由、冒险和结交朋友,从不同的角度来看待事物,当然还有摄影!对我来说,旅行和摄影是密不可分的。

Neocha: How did your trip to Seoul come about?

Johan: I really had no idea about what to expect when I decided to go to Seoul. I had been in Japan for a few months and my visa was expiring, meaning that I had to leave the country for a while. South Korea had always been on my list, and I was really looking forward to seeing it for myself, as for some reason I never got to see many images of the country. When I got to Seoul, it took me about 24 hours and a lot of walking around the city to take my first photo. Things were a lot less accessible and obvious than in Japan, and it felt like I had to soak it all in before I could start taking any photographs.


Neocha: 为什么会想要去首尔?

Johan: 我一开始决定去首尔的时候,我真的没有带着什么特别的期望。当时我已经在日本呆了几个月,签证快要过期,所以我要离开日本一会儿。韩国一直是我想要去的国家之一,我也很期待去这个国家,但不知道为什么,我一直很少机会看到关于这个国家的图片。刚到首尔的时候,我在这座城市里逛了很久,过了快24小时才拍下第一张照片。比起日本,这里的一切更难以接触,更隐晦,感觉就像我必须要深入其中,才能拍到想要的照片。

Neocha: What were some of your first impressions of the city?

Johan: Seoul had been very confusing for me at first, as I could see very little related to its past and history, and what I could see did not always feel coherent. Architecture in many parts of the city made me feel like I was in some sort of communist country with all these identical concrete buildings shaping the landscape, and just a few kilometers away you’d find yourself walking on huge avenues filled with hundreds of high-end shops, and you’d be reminded that you were in a country that’s embraced capitalism like no other.

Another thing that struck me was the overabundance of churches everywhere. Every direction you look, you’d see them – red neon crosses that have invaded Seoul’s skyline. Talking about neon, it’s something I’ve been shooting a lot of lately. I love the light and the atmosphere that it creates. Neon definitely feels a little bit retro, but at the same time, it keeps us fantasizing about these futuristic vertical metropolises.


Neocha: 你对这座城市的第一印象是什么?

Johan: 一开始,首尔让我感到很困惑,我很难看到这座城市与其过去和历史的关联,我所看到的事物也总是感觉不是很一致。很多地方的建筑让我感觉这是一个共产主义国家,一模一样的凝土建筑物,组成了这座城市的景观,然后仅几公里之外,就是宽阔的商业大道,充满数以百计间高端商店,这时你才会意识到,这也是个不折不扣的资本主义国家。

另一件我最难忘的事是,这里的教堂无处不在。不论在哪里,你都能看到那些红色的霓虹灯十字架,占据着首尔的城市天际线。说到霓虹灯,这是我最近很喜欢拍摄的东西。我很喜欢这种灯光,以及它所创造的氛围。霓虹灯确实有点复古的味道,但同时又会令人幻想到未来的垂直化大都市。

Neocha: As a film photographer, what are your thoughts on the film versus digital debate?

Johan: There shouldn’t be any final conclusion about film or digital – they both have their pros and cons. Digital is easy to use, convenient, accessible to everyone, and gives flawless results. Unlike film, the processing is instantaneous, costless, and allows for endless post-processing modification. As always, industries deliver what consumers are asking for.

Film is expensive and frustrating. There’s no insane post-processing to make dull images look great in the end. You can’t take hundreds of photos in a day, hoping to have a good one in the end or take the same photo over and over again until it looks good on-screen. You have to get it right the first time, and this is without a doubt the best way to learn. Shooting mechanical cameras and film gives me the feeling that I’m part of the process, that I’m in control, and that I’m actually making the photo. Working with film, I realized that I was spending a lot more time on framing and working on composition, and more importantly, I would not rely solely on the camera for the result. If your photos are not good enough, you can’t blame the autofocus or justify it by the fact that you didn’t have the money for that ISO 204800 camera. If your photos aren’t good, it’s simply because you’re not a good photographer. Technology in photography doesn’t make things better. It just makes things more convenient.


Neocha: 作为一名用胶片拍摄的摄影师,你对于胶片摄影与数码摄影之间的争论有什么看法?

Johan: 对于胶片摄影与数码摄影之间的争论,应该永远也不会有最后结论,这两者都有各自的优点和弊处。数码摄影更容易、更方便,所有人都可以使用,拍出来的照片也很不错。与胶片摄影不同,数码摄影即时显像,不需要成本,也可以有无休止的后期修改。每个行业都会努力提供消费者所需要的产品,这一点向来如此。

而胶片摄影的成本更高,也往往容易令人沮丧,你不可以疯狂地进行后期处理,将一张原本平庸的照片变成一幅棒极了的照片;你也不能一天拍好几百张照片,然后指望其中会有一张好照片;或是一遍又一遍地拍同一张照片,直到在你屏幕上的照片看起来不错。你必须在第一次按快门就拍好,所以这无疑是学习摄影的最佳途径。用机械胶片相机和胶片拍摄,让我感觉自己成为了这个创作过程的一部分,我有控制权,我感觉这才是真正地在创作一张照片。用胶片拍摄时,我发现自己会花更多时间思考构图,更重要的是,我不会全然依赖相机。如果你的照片不够好,你不能说是自动对焦的问题,也没有藉口说是因为你没有足够的钱,买一台ISO 204800的相机。如果你的照片不够好,只是因为你不是一个好的摄影师。在摄影方面,科技不会让照片拍得更好。它只会让拍照变得更方便。

Neocha: How would you summarize your approach to photography, and what are some recurring themes in your work?

Johan: I used to take a lot of photos of people in busy places, mostly cities, of people in motion, people that would catch my attention. I’ve never tried to make any specific statement with my photos. I just want my photographs to be a reflection of a time and place. They’re just snapshots. I usually go out walking with a camera in my hand and take photos of the things that I react to. I don’t believe photography should be too cerebral, and I try not to overthink my shots. I like spontaneous things.

As I mentioned, film photography changed my approach a little. It forced me to take my time. It helped me to be more patient, and so I started to photograph things differently – more still images, pictures with no people, empty spaces. I also started paying more attention to colors and geometry. When I’m traveling, things are also a bit different. I try to build a series rather than taking a bunch of candid shots without any specific theme.


Neocha: 你如何描述自己的摄影方式,你的作品中的常见主题有哪些?

Johan: 我曾经拍过很多人们在繁忙地方的照片,大多是在城市,拍摄一些行动中的人们,拍摄那些会引起我注意的人。我从来没有试图在我的照片中表达某种特定的态度。我只想通过自己的照片记录某个时刻和地方……它们只是一张张快照。我通常拿着相机就出门散步,看到想拍的事物就拍下来。我认为摄影的时候不需要思考太多的事情,我在拍摄时尽量不去考虑太多。我喜欢自然而然的东西。

正如我前面所说,胶片摄影也影响了我的摄影方法。它让我在拍摄时放慢速度、更有耐心,也因为这样,我开始拍摄不同的对象,更多的是静止的图像,没有人,空荡的场所。我也开始更多地关注颜色和几何形状。当我去旅行时,拍摄的方法也会有点不同。我会试着创作一个系列,而不是没有任何特定的主题,直接拍一堆照片。

Neocha: Are there any particular themes or lasting impressions from your series in Seoul?

Johan: Culturally, It feels like there’s this huge gap with massive differences of interests and lifestyle between generations. South Korea, and Seoul probably even more, has been changing so much and in such a short period of time. Because so many younger generations of South Koreans are able to travel and study abroad, I guess many came back with a different idea of what they wanted for their country and for their lives. South Korea has been heavily impacted by Western culture, but it feels like its people managed to adapt and blend it to their own culture, making it theirs. I definitely want to go back to South Korea and focus more on the youth next time.


Neocha:这一次在首尔摄影的作品中,有没有什么特别的主题或比较深的印象?

Johan:从文化上来说,我觉得韩国不同世代的人们之间在兴趣和生活方式方面有很大的差异。在韩国,尤其是首尔,在很短的时间内,这里发生了翻天覆地的变化。很多年轻一代的韩国人出国旅游和留学,我想,他们中很多人回来后对于自己的国家和生活都会有了不同的想法。韩国受到很多西方文化的影响,但似乎韩国人们将这种影响成功融入到他们自己的文化中,将其变成韩国的特色文化。我还想再去一次韩国,下一次会把目光更多地放在年轻人身上。

Neocha: What is your personal philosophy towards photography? What does photography mean to you?

Johan: To me, photography is about accurately remembering and capturing real life for future generations. Photographers are witnesses of time, documenting life. Some photographers are talented enough to add emotions and beauty to their images, to get reactions out of their viewers. I hope that people can see my photographs in 30, 40, 50 years in a different context. Who knows what will have become of photography and the world in general by then.

My relation to photography is very personal – it’s almost a kind of therapy for me. Walking with a camera in my hands is one of the rare moments when I manage to completely focus my mind on what I’m doing. It forces me to be in the moment, and it stimulates me. It keeps me curious and gives me the motivation to make new projects, or even just to simply go outside and do something.


Neocha: 关于摄影,你的个人理念是什么?摄影对你来说意味着什么?

Johan: 对我来说,摄影是要准确地记录和捕捉当下的现实生活,留给未来的人们看。摄影师是时间的证人,生活的记录者。一些才华横溢的摄影师能把情感和美融入到他们的照片中,引起观众的情感共鸣。我希望在30、40或50年后,不同时代的人们可以看到我的照片。谁知道到时候,摄影和世界会变成怎么样呢?

对我来说,摄影是挺个人的事情,几乎可以说是一种治疗。拿着相机散步是很弥足珍贵的时刻,因为我可以完全专注其中。它迫使我融入那一时刻,刺激着我。让我保持好奇,给我动力去进行新的项目,甚至只是简单地到外面去,做点什么。

Websitejohanchomet.com
Instagram@johan_chomet
VSCO~/thelongjourney

 

Contributor: George Zhi Zhao


网站johanchomet.com
Instagram@johan_chomet
VSCO~/thelongjourney

 

供稿人: George Zhi Zhao

The Major Arcana

October 10, 2017 2017年10月10日
The Empress (III)

Tang Xiao Ming is a Malaysian illustrator with a passion for editorial illustrations and visual storytelling. His illustration series, The Major Arcana, is an editorial approach to the twenty-two card tarot suit. Often used for divination and occult purposes, the Major Arcana has been understood as an archetypal system for psychological and spiritual advancement and has been reinterpreted by numerous artists since its invention in the 15th century.


马来西亚插画家Tang Xiao Ming热爱刊物插画和视觉叙事创作。他的插画系列《Major Arcana》(大秘仪)就是以塔罗牌中的22张主牌Major arcana为灵感创作的刊物插画。Major Arcana 通常用于占卜和其它神秘的用途,一直以来,它被人们视为是一个有关心理和精神层面发展的原型系统,自15世纪问世以来,已经被无数艺术家重新诠释过。

The Hanged Man (XII)
The Hierophant (V)
The Sun (XIX)
The Magician (I)

Tang’s interpretation of the Major Arcana series was a stepping stone for his personal style, which brought about its own challenges and rewards. He tells us about the creative process behind the series: “As an artist, sometimes you’ll run into a brick wall creatively, but it’s only temporary and it has the potential to change your life. It’s only from being stuck that you will start to think differently, and your creative process is forced to change. Because of this, it will unlock further possibilities in life and work.”


Tang以自己个人风格来演绎《Major Arcana》,当中也带来了相应的挑战和收获。他跟我们分享了这一系列创作过程的故事:“作为一名艺术家,有时候你会碰到创意方面的瓶颈,但它只是暂时性的,并且有可能会改变你的生活。只有当你感觉遇上了瓶颈,你才会开始有不同的想法,从而迫使你改变自己的创作思路。正因为如此,它会为你的生活和工作带来更多的可能性。”

Temperance (XIV)
Strength (VIII)
The Emperor (IV)
Judgment (XX)

Growing up in Malaysia, Tang was influenced by his society’s lack of awareness towards mental health. Instead of drawing influence from local Malaysian art and culture, he focuses on the psychological struggles of young people as a consistent theme in his work. Tang says, “In Malaysia and most of Asia, mental illnesses and psychological factors are not widely talked about – because of this, I think that many of my illustrations are themed around the mind and the emotions, because many of us do not know how to express ourselves or understand who we really are inside.”


Tang自小在马来西亚长大,周围人们对心理健康的意识很薄弱,这一点也影响了他。他没有从马来西亚当地文化和艺术绘画中寻找灵感,而是专注于青少年的心理斗争,将之作为自己的作品中最常见的主题。Tang说:“在马来西亚和亚洲大部分地区,精神疾病和心理健康还没有获得人们的广泛讨论。正因为如此,我觉得自己许多插图作品都是围绕心灵和情感主题的,因为我们当中很多人都不知道如何表达自己,也不了解在内心里面真实的自己。”

The Chariot (VII)
Death (XIII)
The Star (XVII)
The High Priestess (II)

Some of Tang’s early influences include notable comic artists Olivier Coipel and Stuart Immonen, as well as graphic novels like Watchmen. Currently, he identifies his primary influence as visual artist James Jean: “Jean’s paintings deal with the unknown – they are very emotionally driven. They relate to me and inspire me to do what I’ve always loved to do, which is to create. I hope that my creativity will, in turn, inspire others and allow them to understand the way that I feel.”


Tang的早期影响还包括著名漫画家 Olivier Coipe和Stuart Immonen,以及《守望者》等漫画。目前,他说自己最主要的影响是视觉艺术家James Jean :“Jean的画作都是有关未知的主题,蕴含着饱满的情感,让我很受触动,也激励着我去做自己一直喜欢做的事情,那就是创作。通过我自己的创意,我希望可以反过来激励他人,让他们明白我的感受。”

Justice (XI)
The Devil (XV)
The Fool (0)
The Lovers (VI)
The Moon (XVIII)
The Hermit (IX)

Websiteimtxm.com
Instagram: @imtxm

 

Contributor: George Zhi Zhao


网站imtxm.com
Instagram: @imtxm

 

供稿人: George Zhi Zhao

Flesh Love

October 9, 2017 2017年10月9日
Ichika & Arisa

Flesh Love is a photography project by Tokyo-based artist Photographer Hal. Over the years, Photographer Hal has explored the themes of love and attachment by taking photographs of couples in enclosed spaces across multiple projects. For the Flesh Love series, Photographer Hal began to vacuum seal couples together in plastic wrap as a way to examine modern relationships. Photographer Hal tells us more about the story behind his work below.


《Flesh Love》是由东京艺术家Photographer Hal创作的一个摄影项目。多年来,Photographer Hal曾在多个摄影项目中,用镜头捕捉情侣在封闭空间的照片,探讨爱情和迷恋的主题。在《Flesh Love》系列中,Photographer Hal将情侣装在一个巨型真空密封袋中,寓意对现代男女关系的一种审视。Photographer Hal向我们分享了更多关于这些作品背后的故事。

Yuya & Ritsuko
Kazan & Tomoe
Yohei & Yuri
Miho & Ritsu

“When you embrace your lover, sometimes you wish to melt right into them. To realize this wish, I’ve been photographing couples in small and cramped spaces like motels and bathtubs. As my work has become more and more intense, I’ve noticed that communication is indispensable.”


“拥抱着自己的爱人时,有时候你会突然希望自己可以融入他们的身体当中。为了实现这个愿望,我常常选择在狭窄拥挤的空间里拍摄情侣,譬如汽车旅馆和浴缸。随着自己作品的风格越来越强烈,我发现,沟通也是不可或缺的。”

Sakamaki & Makino
Take & Mari
Michico & Yuhei
Yajyu & Kaorin

“I go to Kabukicho in Shinjuku, underground bars in Shibuya and many other places which are full of activity like luscious night time bee hives. When I see a couple of interest I will begin to negotiate. I’m sure that many people initially think of my proposal as unusual or even look through me like I am completely invisible, but I always push forward with my challenge to them. The models appear from all walks of life, and individually, have included musicians, dancers, strippers, laborers, restaurant and bar managers, photographers, businessmen and businesswomen, the unsettled and the unemployed, and so on.”


“我去新宿的歌舞伎町,涩谷的地下酒吧,还有很多地方,都是一些夜生活比较热闹的地方。看到感兴趣的情侣时,我就会跟他们搭讪。我敢肯定,很多人一开始都会觉得我的建议很奇怪,甚至直接无视我,当我不存在,但我会继续说服他们,用激将法问他们敢不敢做我的模特。我镜头下的模特来自社会上的各行各业,他们中有音乐家、舞蹈家、脱衣舞者、劳工、餐厅和酒吧经理,也有摄影师、商人、流浪汉和无业人员等等。”

Rem & Marina
Zinzin & Norico
Ami & Kojiro
Mana & Koji

“This time, I reached the point of photographing couples in vacuum-sealed packs in a set that I’ve constructed in my own kitchen. The lights are in the ceiling, so I just flip one switch and have everything ready. I have a few different colored paper backgrounds, which I leave rolled up in the corner. After the couple gets in the vacuum pack, I suck the air out with a vacuum cleaner until there’s none left. This gives me ten seconds to take the shot. In this extremely limited time I can’t release the shutter more than twice. I’ve been in there myself, and the fear I felt was overwhelming.”


“这一次,我的想法是让情侣装在真空密封袋里拍摄,拍摄地点就在我自己的厨房里。天花板上有吊灯,所以我只需按一下开关,一切就准备就绪了。我有几种不同颜色的纸张作为背景,不用的时候可以卷起放在角落里。情侣进入真空密封袋后,我再用吸尘器吸光里面的空气。然后我只有十秒钟的时间来拍照片。在这极其有限的时间内,我最多只能按2次快门。拍摄的时候,我感觉自己也像是装在真空密封袋里一般,内心也会感到铺天盖地的恐惧。”

Makoto & Shinji
Sachiko & Atsushi
Lim & Kyohei
PinQ & Pomco

“As the shooting continues over multiple takes, the pressure of the vacuum seal grows stronger. At the same time, the two bodies start to communicate, and whether through unevenness of limbs or the curve of joints they begin to draw a shape of what they want to express. The two lovers draw closer until they finally transform into a single being. Looking at these vacuum-sealed packs of love, we can imagine a more peaceful world. For me, the vacuum pack is only a means: the important thing is connecting to someone.”


“随着拍摄继续,真空密封袋里的压力会越来越大。同时,里面两个人开始沟通,通过起伏不平的肢体,或关节的曲线,呈现出一定的廓形,以此表达出他们的想法。两个相爱的人拉近彼此的距离,直到他们最终结为一体。看着这些充满爱意的真空密封袋,会令人联想到一个更和平的世界。对我来说,真空密封袋只是一种手段,更重要的是人与人之间的联系。”

Chihiro & Takeshi
Mihaya & Takao
Yoshi & Naomi
Alice & Kazuya

Website: photographerhal.com

 

Contributor: George Zhi Zhao


网站photographerhal.com

 

供稿人: George Zhi Zhao

Papaya Studio

September 26, 2017 2017年9月26日

Located in Bangkok, Papaya Studio is an antique collectible and vintage furniture studio, and the largest space of its kind in Asia. Having been in business for over 40 years, this multi-story, maze-like warehouse hosts a vast collection of over 100,000 items amassed from around the world. From Eastern European ceramics and vintage figurines to retro electronics and precious cutlery, Papaya Studio has any item that you could possibly imagine – along with much more.


Papaya Studio是曼谷一家著名古董收藏品和古董家具工作室,也是亚洲面积最大的古董工作室。这间工作室至今已有40多年,几层楼的仓库里,宛如一个巨大迷宫,有着种类浩繁的收藏品,这些收藏品来自世界各地,数量超过10万多件。从东欧陶瓷、古董雕像、复古电子产品到珍贵餐具,在Papaya Studio你可以找到任何你能想到或没想到的物品。

Mr. Tong, the founder of the studio, has been an antique collector since he was a little boy. At the age of 21, he opened his first antique store as a college student. Since then, his lifelong affair with antiques has motivated him to travel to Europe every three months to search for more items to add to his collection. According to Mr. Tong, each antique is a teacher and a mentor, and like a fine wine, they only get better with age.


工作室创始人Tong先生从小喜欢收藏古董。21岁的时候,他还是一名大学生,就已经创立了他的第一间古玩店。自那时以来,带着对古董长久以来的热爱,他每三个月就会去欧洲旅行,去挖掘更多古董,加入自己的收藏。Tong先生说,每一件古董都像是一位老师和导师,也像是一瓶好酒,随时间推移,更具魅力。

Boasting such an impressive array of items, Papaya Studio also serves as a resource for movie and photography shoots. Their services include prop and furniture rental, and they also rent studio space for wedding photos, fashion shoots, music videos, and movie shoots.


Papaya Studio既然拥有如此众多的古董收藏品,自然也成为了电影和摄影的拍摄资源。他们提供的服务包括道具和家具租赁,也会出租工作室空间拍摄婚礼照片、时尚大片、MV和电影。

Prices are not listed on any of the items in Papaya Studio, so customers will need to consult with management to negotiate a price for items they wish to purchase. Certain items, no matter how high the buying offer, are not for sale, as they hold a special place in Mr. Tong’s collection. For Mr. Tong, money is not the final objective – he is primarily motivated by his emotional connection to these items and a burning desire to share his passion for antiques with others.


Papaya Studio工作室内的所有古董收藏品都没有明码标价,顾客如果想要购买某一件古董,需要和店内的经理咨询价格。其中的一些收藏品,无论买家出价多高,都是非卖品,因为它们对Tong先生有着特别的意义。对Tong先生来说,钱不是最终的目标,他对这些古董收藏品的情感,以及他想要与他人分享对古董的热爱之情才是他经营工作室的初衷。

Address:
Soi Lat Phrao 55/2
Lat Phrao Rd., Wang Thonglang
Bangkok, Thailand

Tel:
+02 5398220

 

Website: papaya55.com
Facebook: ~/papayabkk

 

Contributor & Photographer: George Zhi Zhao


地址:
泰国曼谷
Soi Lat Phrao 55/2
Lat Phrao Rd., Wang Thonglang

电话:
+02 5398220

 

网站papaya55.com
Facebook~/papayabkk

 

供稿人及摄影师: George Zhi Zhao

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Passion & Fragility

September 17, 2017 2017年9月17日
Friends

Mizuki Nishiyama is a Japanese multimedia artist, painter, and poet based in New York City. Currently a student at the Parsons School of Design, Nishiyama creates abstract expressionist works that examine personal experiences, ideas of the extreme, and the concept of human fragility. Nishiyama tells Neocha more about her artwork below.


Mizuki Nishiyama是来自日本的多媒体艺术家、画家和诗人,现居纽约,就读于帕森设计学院(Parsons School of Design)。Nishiyama以抽象表现主义的作品,探讨自己的人生经历,极端的想法和人类脆弱性的概念。最近,Nishiyama和Neocha分享了她对艺术、文化和创意的一些想法。

Snails In Her Eyes
Gustav
In My Lake of Boulders

Neocha: What first drew you to pursue art?

Nishiyama: My grandma, granduncle, and mother are all painters. Each of them work in different mediums – my grandma uses tennen iwa enogu (powdered minerals) for Nihonga (traditional Japanese art), my granduncle paints with watercolor, and my mother paints with oil. As my family has an artistic background, I presume I’ve been influenced by them. Nevertheless, many of my own personal developments have led me to explore different methods to recreate or make a statement, whether it be through music, dance, or writing. Over time, I’ve realized that painting allows me to create the most accurate representation of what I intend to visualize.


Neocha: 你一开始为什么会对艺术感兴趣?

Nishiyama: 我的祖母、伯祖父和母亲都是画家。他们各自用着不同的媒介来创作。我的祖母用Tennen Iwa Enogu(粉状矿物质)来画日本画(Nihonga,指日本的民族传统绘画),我的伯祖父画水彩画,而我母亲则是画油画。由于我家的艺术背景,我从小就已经受到他们的影响。尽管如此,我个人的很多经历也在促使我去寻求不同的方法来创作或表达,可以是音乐,也可以是舞蹈或写作。慢慢地,我意识到,绘画能最准确表达出我想要可视化的内容。

Rokurokubi

Neocha: Aside from familial influences, how does Japan and its culture influence your artistic process?

Nishiyama: I was fortunate to have been raised in a culturally diverse environment. My father is from Japan and my mother is from Hong Kong, but they spent a big portion of their lives in Italy. Bouncing between five languages at home and attending a Canadian International School in Hong Kong, I’ve never been able to identify concretely with particular heritages. However, I’ve always had a fondness for Japanese history and culture. By visiting Japan ever so often, I’ve been exposed to traditional arts such as bunraku (traditional Japanese puppet theatre), kabuki (classical Japanese dance-dramas), buyō (traditional Japanese performing arts), and ukiyo-e (an art genre that flourished in Japan between the 17th and 19th century), which have all brought my attention and attraction to classical arts. I’m so grateful to have been brought up with multiple cultural values, as I do realize that I unconsciously blend aspects of all those cultures together.


Neocha: 日本文化对你的作品有什么影响?

Nishiyama: 我很幸运可以在一个多元文化的环境中成长。我的父亲来自日本,而我的母亲来自香港,但他们大部分时间都生活在意大利。在家里,我会在五种语言之间来回切换,加上是在香港的加拿大国际学校读书的,所以,对我来说,我从来都没有特别觉得自己属于哪一种文化。不过,我一直都很喜欢日本的历史和文化。我经常去日本,也接触到很多当地传统艺术,例如文乐(Bunraku)、歌舞伎(Kabuki)、舞踊(Buyō)和浮世绘(Ukiyo-e)、而这些艺术又让我开始注意并喜欢上古典艺术。我很感恩,自己能在这种多元文化的环境中成长,因为我发现,自己会不自觉地将这些不同文化融合在一起。

B.D.P.C.
She
Peas and Peaches

Neocha: What are some recurrent themes in your artwork?

Nishiyama: I’m a very emotionally driven person. I’m tempestuous, and my thoughts are impassioned. The images that I paint come from a very sensitive and ardent side of my human experience that I simply want to document.

My work covers unconventional topics about the human experience that are intentionally confrontational. I’m extremely intrigued by the rawness of the human psyche when we are vulnerable to our emotions. These feelings help cultivate my creativity through emotional intimacy between myself and the brush. The themes I’ve expressed thus far have been based on personal experiences and spontaneous social issues, often ignored or instinctively disregarded by society.

I started painting as a response to many situations in my life. This allowed me to take a step back, and analyze these situations through a secondary lens. I consider my paintings as somewhat of a visual diary. By looking back at my work, I’ve learned to understand myself better – emotionally and circumstantially.


Neocha你的作品有哪些常见主题?

Nishiyama我是一个很情绪化的人。我性格暴躁,充满激动的想法。我所创作的画像,灵感就源自于我想要记录的那些极为敏感和激烈的人生经历。

我的作品探讨的都是比较颠覆传统、关于人类经历的主题,充满着故意的对抗性。我尤其热衷研究人类最本质的精神世界,因为那时候的我们很容易受情绪主宰。这些情绪能让我和画笔融为一体,从而提升我的创意。迄今为止,我所表达的主题都是来自于个人的经历和当下的社会问题,尤其是那些常常被社会忽视或本能地忽略的话题。

我一开始画画,是为了对我的生命中很多情况作出回应。通过绘画,我可以让自己退后一步,以另一个角度来分析这些情况。我觉得自己的画作其实算是我的视觉日记。回顾这些作品,可以让我更好地了解自己的情感和身处的环境。

Camellia
Tic Tac Toe
Swing Me From The Cantaloupe I Swear To Beckon This Raisin Day

Neocha: How does color play a role in your art? What does color mean to you?

Nishiyama: Selecting the appropriate colors to provoke emotions and amplify messages are constantly on my mind. Themes surrounding my pieces are often quite impassioned, so I tend to naturally grab darker, more vibrant and vivid shades. I am currently experimenting with mediums. I am familiar working with highly pigmented shades, however, I’ve recently begun incorporating gouache, gloss, thickening mediums, as well as glazing to create a variety of looks.


Neocha: 色彩在你的艺术创作中扮演什么角色?色彩对你来说意味着什么?

Nishiyama: 我总是会去思考如何选择合适的色彩来挑动情绪,突显作品想要传达的信息。我的作品主题往往都十分激烈的情感,所以很自然地,我倾向于使用更鲜活生动的暗色调。我目前在尝试用不同的媒介进行创作。我比较擅长用高饱和度的色彩创作,但是最近我也开始使用水粉、光泽涂料、可以增厚质感的媒介,以及透明画法(glazing)来营造同不的效果。

Sunflowers Dream

Neocha: As both a painter and a poet, how does your creative process differ across these two mediums?

Nishiyama: Literature and painting go hand-in-hand when it comes to being able to show an accurate representation of what I intend to document. I’m a big fan of confessional poetry. I do not intend to create flawless stanzas nor sculptured phrases. I have always treated both my paintings and my poems as representative milestones in my life. The commonality would be the emotional heaviness I convey through both mediums.


Neocha: 你身兼画家和诗人两个身份,那么你在分别创作这两个媒介时,会有什么不同的创作思路吗?

Nishiyama: 文学和绘画都能准确表达出我想要记录的内容,在这一点上,两者是一样的。我特别喜欢自白派诗歌(Confessional Poetry)。我不打算创作出完美无瑕的诗节,也不想精雕细琢所用的词语。一直以来,我创作的画和诗都是记录我生命的里程碑。两者的共性在于我透过这两种媒介传达的沉重情感。

Katherine

Neocha: How has studying in New York City influenced your attitude towards art?

Nishiyama: I became more driven once I started attending the Parsons School of Design, due to constantly being surrounded by highly motivated and creative people. Moving to New York City meant there were going to be a lot of new life changes, and that resulted in many conversational pieces. Nonetheless, Hong Kong, Japan, and New York are all creative, visionary cities to develop one’s art. But I do favor New York simply because it is a new chapter in my life, and there is yet so much more for me to learn and explore.


Neocha: 在纽约学习的经历让你对艺术的态度产生了什么变化?

Nishiyama: 入读美国帕森斯设计学院( Parsons School of Design)后,我变得更有创作的动力,因为身边的人都充满了创作欲望和创意才华的人。搬到纽约后,在生活上自然会发生很多的变化,也因此创作了很多交谈画(Conversational Piece)。虽然香港、日本和纽约都是充满前卫创意的地方,非常适合发展艺术,但我尤其喜欢纽约。原因很简单,它代表着我人生的新篇章,在这座城市有那么多值得我去学习和探索的东西。

Messy Heads

Website: mizukinishiyama.com

 

Contributor: George Zhi Zhao


网站mizukinishiyama.com

 

供稿人: George Zhi Zhao

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Reintrepreting Pop Culture

September 8, 2017 2017年9月8日
Yantra (II): The Eye of Horrors

Reza Hasni is an illustrator and motion graphics artist from Singapore who creates colorful psychedelic pop art. Bringing together influences ranging from religion and sacred geometry to pop art and emojis, Hasni’s work introduces mystical ideas in a playful, modern-day manner. In true pop art form, the artist shared with us his thoughts on various topics through a curated collection of quotes from TV shows and celebrities.


Reza Hasni是来自新加坡的一名动态图像设计师和插画家,作品多为色彩缤纷的迷幻流行艺术。从宗教到神圣几何学,从流行艺术到表情符号,都是Hasni的创作灵感,他通过作品,以现代、有趣的方式,讲述各种神秘的想法。这位艺术家用名副其实的流行艺术形式,用一系列引言,转述他自己关于不同话题的想法。

Channeling
The Wheel of Internet
Yantra (III): Peace

On Artistry

“I never cared so much about making perfect sense. I wanted to make perfect nonsense. I wanted to tell jokes, but I didn’t give a fuck about the punchline.”
– Harmony Korine

“Real artists have day jobs.” – Sara Benincasa

“You have to think anyway, so why not think big?” – Donald J. Trump


关于艺术

“我从来没有特别想要讲有意义的话。我只想说完美的废话。我想说笑话,但我又不会特意去想什么笑点。”—— 哈莫尼·科里恩(Harmony Korine)

“真正的艺术家都会有一份全职工作。”——Sara Benincasa

“反正你得思考,为何不想得远大点?” ——唐纳德·特朗普(Donald J. Trump)

Merkabah
Egg of Life

On Inspiration

“Some people choose to see the ugliness in this world, the disarray. I choose to see the beauty. To believe there is an order to our days. A purpose.” – Dolores Abernathy from Westworld


关于灵感

“有些人选择关注这个世界的丑陋之处,关注混乱与无序。但我选择去关注其中的美好;选择去相信我们的生活有着自己的秩序和意义。”

——朵洛莉丝·埃布尔纳西(Dolores Abernathy),《西部世界》(Westworld)

Voyage
Guardian Illusion
Yantra (IV): Guardian

On Culture

“I refuse to accept other people’s ideas of happiness for me. As if there’s a ‘one size fits all’ standard for happiness.” – Kanye West


关于文化

“我拒绝接受别人对幸福的定义,说得好像所有人的幸福都是一样的。”

——坎耶·韦斯特(Kanye West)

Ikaros: Puro Sonido (Pure Sound)
Series 02: Sushumna

On Religion

“Is that what God does? He helps? Tell me, why didn’t God help my innocent friend who died for no reason while the guilty ran free? Okay. Fine. Forget the one offs. How about the countless wars declared in his name? Okay. Fine. Let’s skip the random, meaningless murder for a second, shall we? How about the racist, sexist, phobia soup we’ve all been drowning in because of him? And I’m not just talking about Jesus. I’m talking about all organized religion. Exclusive groups created to manage control. A dealer getting people hooked on the drug of hope. His followers, nothing but addicts who want their hit of bullshit to keep their dopamine of ignorance. Addicts. Afraid to believe the truth. That there’s no order. There’s no power. That all religions are just metastasizing mind worms, meant to divide us so it’s easier to rule us by the charlatans that wanna run us. All we are to them are paying fanboys of their poorly-written sci-fi franchise. If I don’t listen to my imaginary friend, why the fuck should I listen to yours? People think their worship’s some key to happiness. That’s just how he owns you. Even I’m not crazy enough to believe that distortion of reality. So fuck God. He’s not a good enough scapegoat for me.” – Elliot Alderson from Mr. Robot


关于宗教

“那是上帝会做的事情吗?告诉我,上帝为什么不帮助我无辜的朋友?他无故死去,而有罪者都得以逍遥。好吧!先不说这些单个个案了。还有那无数场以他之名打响的战争呢?好吧!我们也先不说随机无意义的谋杀。还有那些我们因为他而产生的种族歧视、性别歧视和各种恐惧呢?而且,我不仅仅是指耶稣,我指的是所有有组织的宗教、排外团体,为控制人们而诞生,一个让人们对‘希望’上瘾的毒贩,其追随者不过是瘾君子,只求吸一口,好保持他们无知的多巴胺。他们不过是不敢相信真相的上瘾者。真相就是根本没有秩序,没有神力,所有宗教都不过是在人们内心不断扩散的蠕虫,旨在分裂我们,以便让那些想掌握我们的骗子统治我们。我们对他们来说只是他们写的很烂的科幻小说系列的迷弟,专门给他们送钱去。如果我都不听我幻想朋友的话,又凭什么要听你们幻想出来的朋友的话。人们以为他们的崇拜是通往幸福的钥匙,而他正是靠这样控制住人们。就连我都没法疯到相信这种对现实的扭曲。所以,去你的上帝,他对我来说不是一位好的替罪者。”

—— 艾略特·奥尔德森(Elliot Alderson) ,《黑客军团》(Mr. Robot)

Thangka: The Wheel of Life
Thangka: Meta Suta – Imaginary Quest

On the Future

“Who knows? It’s like asking where’s Waldo.” – Jerry Seinfeld

“The Force will be with you. Always.” – Obi Wan Kenobi


关于未来

“谁知道呢,这就像是在问‘瓦尔多在哪儿’(Where’s Waldo?)的感觉。”—— 杰瑞·宋飞(Jerry Seinfeld)(《Where’s Waldo?》是一个美国知名的在线游戏,玩家须在茫茫动画人海中找到主人公“瓦尔多”)

“原力将与你同在……一直都会。” ——欧比旺·肯诺比,电影《星球大战》(Star Wars)

Yantra (V): Durga (Harmony & Balance)
Multiverse

Facebook~/rezahasne
Instagram: @reza.hasni

 

供稿人: George Zhi Zhao


脸书~/rezahasne
Instagram@reza.hasni

 

供稿人: George Zhi Zhao