25.1.10

Conversations with Tehching Hsieh

Chatting with Tehching was the highlight of the Symposium (see prior post). During his chat chaired by Adrian Heathfield, he talked about leaving Taiwan on a freight ship to Iran picking up oil en route to Philadelphia where he jumped ship. He spoke about how he had heard tow words in Taiwan 'conceptual happenings'. He had no idea what they meant or how they would be so seminal in his work. In the US as an illegal immigrant he spent 4 years in his studio doing no work. His studio was empty and he just sat their thinking. Then he had this idea, if I've been doing this 4 years why not one more? This was the first one year performance 1978-1979. He then completed 4 more and finished with a final 13 year piece where he would complete work but not present it publicly and basically disappeared. He emerged in 2000 and released a DVD of his work.
He was incredibly humble and genuine. I spoke to him after the event on the freezing cold pier in Plymouth. Tehching apologised for his English skills and said 'I am not as educated as everyone here'. I responded that he was genuine and that this was what people responded to, for he really received a loud applause. It was a welcome relief from an overly cerebral event!

I asked him if he ever had the impetus to make work... he responded 'whats impetus?'... i said need, want... he restated what he said earlier, that he already had his great ideas, that he had no more. and even if he did more it would become formulaic. He added that he also already stated as an art piece that he would not create any more work. And if he reneged on this then all his work would be a lie.

I love this man....

He also still lives in Bed-Stuy (Bedford-Stuyvesant) area of Brooklyn. Recently the grocer in his building was pistol-whipped and robbed. But he said he's been there for the last 12 years and he's never moving again...

Speaking with him reminded me of why I am an artist why I am drawn to what I do. There was such a strong spiritual sense in his work, my friend Debbie compared it to a form of Zen meditation. This is what makes great work, perhaps avoiding a paralyses by analyses and tapping into a deep well of energy that can exist in performance as in life...

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