“borderLINE: 2020 Biennial of Contemporary Art” is an exhibition that challenges notions of borders. Mindy Yan Miller talks about their work in the exhibition and offers a behind-the-scenes glimpse of the installation. “borderLINE” is presented by ATB at your AGA.“borderLINE: 2020 Biennial of Contemporary Art” is an exhibition that challenges notions of borders. Mindy Yan Miller talks about their work in the exhibition and offers a behind-the-scenes glimpse of the installation. “borderLINE” is presented by ATB at your AGA. …
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so i focused mostly on
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textiles but also worked a lot with
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materiality
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and in my graduate studies i started
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working more and more with
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ready maids and with big
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piles of clothing like i would get a
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bail like 900 pounds of clothes and
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at a time um and so i became
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quite i would say addicted to working
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with things that
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had a past history a past kind of life
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and i would try to reveal the life
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that it had
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so i started working a lot more with
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nature when i moved here because
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the environment the natural land the
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land around us is so prominent and
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um i also became more interested in
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agriculture which of course is not
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just nature but in an industry and
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um so i moved from working with the
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clothes
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and the idea of the of people’s bodies
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to
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animal bodies and also thinking
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of how animals
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are kind of understood
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in agriculture as and
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i was thinking a lot about that
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and
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trying to find a way to bring out
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to bring out the sense of the animal
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um that there ha that there had been a
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life there
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the skin is part of a life but also
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the industrial sense of
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how it becomes a product and to have
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both sides of that
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and also working with the grid so
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i mean i think if we look at farms from
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like an
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airplane we see a grid and then i go
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back to my kind of um
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weaving experience i’m not a weaver but
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i do teach
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basic weaving my weaving experience
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and weaving is all about a grid
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the warp and the weft and the
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intersection
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and also thinking of a grid as
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in terms of kind of mechanical
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reproduction
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and so the mechanization
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of the animals lives so that they can
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produce more
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to feed us um
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feed us through dairy or through meat
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and also the shoes that i am wearing
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you know they they are taking care of us
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in lots of ways
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in terms of borders i think of
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that there’s different kinds of
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dualities going on
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um and the materials that i’m using in
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this work
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are um well cowhides that have been cut
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in straight lines and um
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and opened up and plexiglas slats that
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have been
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um fed through the woven through the
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work
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um at that inter those intersections
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and then turned so it opens it literally
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opens up
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the hides and so i guess i’m
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really for me the borders are those kind
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of
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opposites like between the
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organic hide and the
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the smooth clear
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plexiglas that’s completely industrially
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produced and one which is so
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the hide is has so much uh variation
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within it um and then
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the plexiglas is completely homogenous
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so i’m thinking of those kinds of
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borders but
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also in terms of the title
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seeing and not seeing um
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physically uh when you look at the hides
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you might not even see the plexiglas it
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can appear
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like the hide is just hovering and
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so it’s kind of like the structures
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that we use in order to
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feed ourselves are hidden and
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we can choose to think about it or
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not to think about it
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a lot of my work has been in relation to
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memorials and has
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kind a lot to do with life and death
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and remembering and even light
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so the plexiglas also brings light
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along its edges to the hide which
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is a kind of death right
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i started the leather work in a lot of
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in
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in a way like a lot of people started
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doing leather work
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i started by um i didn’t know how to
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start
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so i i bought a kit and i was starting
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by working
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um not with the hair on hide like the
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hides
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up in the gallery but just a thick
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leather that then you can punch and
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stamp
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and you can lace and so i started with
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that
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i didn’t actually finish my project
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because it didn’t hold that much
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interest for me
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but i did start with that and i was also
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researching
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um what kind of patterns are used
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in leather and in western wear
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and i was seeing a lot of natural
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patterns a lot of foliage and scrolls
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and
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and um i felt um
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personally um suspicious of that
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and that it was um
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marking the leather as natural but yet
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the way that i was acquiring the leather
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was nothing natural about it was an
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industry
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just like any other industry and um
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so i wanted to find a way of working
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with it
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that i thought would bring that out and
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that’s how i ended up working
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with the grid so strongly was to bring
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out that kind
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of mechanization
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and i always try to work so that it’s
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really a focus
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on the material not
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my personal artistic expression
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but just to focus on the material itself
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it’s not that i love cutting straight
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lines
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or or even find it easy right but it’s
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just
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um i think that that
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brings out the um i guess the kind of
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somber
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aspect and also points to weaving
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um i did have the opportunity to show
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this work in
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um in estevan muse at the estevan museum
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and art gallery
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in esteban saskatchewan and
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one of the things one of the people
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who saw the show said to me is she
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thanked me for
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for doing a work that highlighted what
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animals
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give us and uh she just said that in
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passing to me as she was leaving the
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gallery
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and i really um appreciated those
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con that comment and um
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i think that that is a takeaway for
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for me and hopefully for the audience
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too
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you
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