In this AGAlive, aiya哎呀 discuss the shifting borders of Chinatown in Edmonton and their upcoming work in “borderLINE: the 2020 Biennial of Contemporary Art”, presented by ATB Financial at your AGA. This conversation takes place in many locations that are relevant to their work; the former site of the Chinatown gate in Edmonton, the LRT, the outdoor storage where the gate sits dismantled, the location slated for the construction of a new Chinatown gate, and the AGA. By visiting all of these locations during their discussion, the artists Grace Law and Shawn Tse with curator Lindsey Sharman unpack the complexities of their practice.
“borderLINE: the 2020 Biennial of Contemporary Art” opens at the AGA and Remai Modern on September 26.
Lindsey V. Sharman is Curator of the Art Gallery of Alberta. She has studied Art History and Curating in Canada, England, Switzerland and Austria, earning degrees from the University of Saskatchewan and the University of the Arts, Zurich. From 2012-2018 she was the first curator of the Founders’ Gallery at the Military Museums in Calgary, an academic appointment through the University of Calgary. Her primary area of research is politically and socially engaged art practice. Curatorial projects of note include TRENCH, a durational performance by Adrian Stimson; Felled Trees, an exhibition deconstructing national identity at Canada House, London; Gassed Redux by Adad Hannah; and the nationally touring retrospective The Writing on the Wall: Works of Dr. Joane Cardinal Schubert.In this AGAlive, aiya哎呀 discuss the shifting borders of Chinatown in Edmonton and their upcoming work in “borderLINE: the 2020 Biennial of Contemporary Art”, presented by ATB Financial at your AGA. This conversation takes place in many locations that are relevant to their work; the former site of the Chinatown gate in Edmonton, the LRT, the outd …
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Intro
Intro
0:00
Intro
0:00
Background
Background
0:20
Background
0:20
aiya
aiya
5:50
aiya
5:50
shawn
shawn
7:20
shawn
7:20
harbin gate
harbin gate
8:11
harbin gate
8:11
coliseum
coliseum
9:38
coliseum
9:38
Canada Place
Canada Place
10:18
Canada Place
10:18
Inner City
Inner City
25:38
Inner City
25:38
Use CTRL+F to find key words if it is a longer transcript.
Intro
0:07
borderline the 2020 biennial of contemporary art opens at your aga
0:12
and raymie modern this fall the exhibition at your aga is presented by atb financial
Background
0:21
hi um thanks for joining us my name is lindsay sharman i am the curator of the
0:26
art gallery of alberta standing out front of the gallery now you can see it there behind me
0:32
uh and today i’m going to be talking with grace law and shaun c two members of the aya collective i was
0:39
selected to be in the 2020 biennial of contemporary art entitled border line that will be
0:46
opening at the aga and the rainbow modern at the end of september
0:51
the biennial is an exhibition that happens every two years and looks at contemporary art
0:57
in alberta up until this year the biennial looked at
1:02
alberta and alberta artists and those that are working within alberta’s provincial borders this year
1:10
rather than looking at that strict geographical boundary the biennial instead focused on the
1:15
territorial borders of the numbered treaty regions to also open
1:20
a conceptual conversation around borders which are prioritized and what it means
1:27
to cross them challenge them or be in proximity to them the art gallery of alberta situated on
1:34
treaty six as is our partner institution raymie modern
1:39
the aj is also in edmonton and is on the traditional land of diverse indigenous peoples including cree
1:47
blackfoot metis nakota sioux iroquois dene and ojibwe soto anishnabe
1:55
and to further situate the aga we’re also just minutes from chinatown grace we’re going to be
2:01
talking to today is actually just down the street from me at the former site of edmonton’s
2:07
chinatown gates and i am on my way now taking the very short walk
2:13
from the aga to go meet her aya was selected by the four biennial
2:19
curators myself francesca hebert spence felicia gay
2:24
and sandra fraser because of their interest in the borders of edmonton’s chinatown
2:30
their interest in the barriers to participation in public space you’ll probably see around me there’s
2:37
tons of construction going on right now and a part of this construction is the
2:42
building of a new lrt line that construction also unfortunately
2:50
resulted in the city of edmonton dismantling and moving the harbin gate that once
2:56
marked the entrance into chinatown aya formed out of that
3:02
and with the goal uh to encourage conversation around that move to imagine and
3:09
reimagine what the gate and what chinatown could be and respond to the cultural erasure and
3:16
displacement of chinatown and to create space for radical dialogue
3:21
among the asian diaspora so sean and grace who will be talking to
3:27
you today sean is a chinese canadian filmmaker artist and educator passionate about community
3:34
storytelling and social change he recently led a heritage art project
3:40
figure one two three six eight using chinese ink paintings audio
3:47
and film to tell edmonton chinatown stories and as the creator of the
3:52
intergenerational cooking show seconds please gracelaw is a visual
3:58
artist community organizer and cultural labor who often works in public space
4:04
she was born and raised in edmonton and now calls chinatown home so i’m actually just across the street
4:10
from grace now grace is going to tell us more about the collective the work that they do
4:16
and what is important about the spot that we’re now both standing on
aiya
5:51
thanks lindsay hi i’m grace i’m part of aya and the reason why aya formed is because
5:58
of the removal of the harbin gates the harbin gate is edmonton’s chinatown
6:03
gate and it’s an icon over chinatown and it was removed on a very late and
6:10
very cold november in 2017. the day after the removal i remember
6:17
standing at this very spot and looked at the vastness the new vastness of the space
6:25
and felt a heavy weight of emptiness and i asked myself what is the role of the artist and how
6:33
are artists supposed to respond so quickly i have formed i knew my
6:38
memory was short and i wanted to honor the sight before i forgot this
6:44
feeling of loss and so there are four of us who are core to
6:50
the aya collective and some friends join in when they can there is lan chan marples who is a
6:57
historian and wyling london who’s a teacher and both of them are long-standing chinatown community
7:04
members and there’s shawn and i who are trained as artists and together we make
7:10
spaces for our community to remember and dream about what chinatown means today
7:17
so let’s see where hi there i’m shawn i’m part of aya
shawn
7:24
and i’m on the lrt line capital line going north heading towards
7:30
colosseum station to visit the harbin gate in storage
7:37
usually when i go i visit by car or bike so this is actually my very first time
7:43
going on the train and i’ve heard that the
7:48
view of the actual gate in storage is quite clear and so i’m quite excited to to check it
7:56
out this way and uh yeah show you guys what it looks like and how to get there um
8:04
yeah so let me just swap the view so that you guys can see what it looks like
harbin gate
8:13
so in our ayah projects we uh reference the harbin gate and the removal and
8:20
so often we’re asked what is the state of the gate now where is it and so
8:28
yeah this is uh this is coliseum station coming right up and so i’m i’m excited
8:34
to show everyone exactly where it is how to get to it
8:41
yeah oh i think i see it so
8:47
let’s see how clear of a view we get
8:55
all right there it is right there the orange rooftop
9:02
so we’re gonna head towards that area
9:09
yeah yeah so very very clear view actually um
9:16
over there you know basically all the pieces of the harbin gate were were dismantled
9:23
and and put over there so obviously it’s not as high because uh a lot of the pillars that uh hoisted it
9:30
up were also you know part of that set over there and alongside there’s
9:35
you know the lions we’re here now at coliseum station
coliseum
9:40
and you can see we’re we’re at the transit center entrance or exit
9:47
and we’re actually just in front of the bus terminus and we’re
9:53
gonna actually you know kind of go uh past the bus terminus and take a left uh past the the large
10:01
road and then you see this amp tech building that building
10:07
behind it is the storage site so we’re just gonna make our way over there and while we do that let’s uh jump onto
10:14
the call with uh lindsay and grace and see where they’re at hey lindsay hey lindsay and grace
Canada Place
10:21
hey sean how’s it going hi uh thank you both for
10:29
joining us it’s great yeah thanks thank you for getting us yeah so to just i just kind of want to
10:36
like get a sense of kind of where everybody is uh sean you’re quite far
10:43
from us um but to just kind of situate us i’m gonna switch
10:48
i can figure out how to switch my camera around there we go um so just down for me
10:55
there’s jasper uh here i am in front of canada place um and down the street
11:03
you can see see her give us a wave grace okay lindsay
11:16
um yeah so i’m on the the site where um the new gate will be uh grace is on the
11:22
side where the old gate will be um and sean’s on the way to go see
11:28
the former gate in storage um so first up um i wonder if the both of
11:35
you could just tell us a little bit about what does it mean to you to have the entry and therefore
11:42
borders of chinatown change and what effect does that have on
11:47
chinatown uh yeah for me well traditionally
11:53
chinatown gates serve as an entryway into chinatown so
11:58
with the new gate situated 90 degrees and a block south
12:06
it serves a new function it will serve as a memorial to the former chinatown where
12:14
canada place is now situated and so what does that say to us as a community
12:20
when our chinatown gate and icon of chinatown serves as a function so there’s a
12:26
different function serves as a memorial because to me chinatown is still a
12:32
living community and it’s not something to museum museum
12:38
apply and so that move that plan that tells me how
12:47
the study planners value our community and
12:54
it’s kind of a foreshadow of what may happen to our community
13:08
yeah no i think uh grace uh shawn did you have anything to add
13:13
yeah i you know i think yeah grace um you know mentioned a lot of uh yeah
13:20
really important things there um i think in terms of like the historical context
13:26
it’s interesting to me like not just studying uh edmonton’s chinatown but other
13:32
chinatowns as well that um it seems like there’s no consistency
13:38
when it comes to what the gate is i mean i think it’s symbolic more than it is
13:43
actually uh representative of like the starting
13:49
of you know the border you know per se um i mean the the old gate the old gate
13:58
in a sense was on you know a long 97 and now the new gate is close but
14:06
it’s uh directly on 97 so it i mean sorry like the old gate was
14:14
a long 97 but uh facing uh 102.
14:21
and so yeah so the the the chain the change of things um aren’t
14:28
necessarily uh reflective of you know the border of
14:34
like the true chinatown and if we’re talking about like the the current status of um that area
14:42
which is technically not even named chinatown right now so where you guys are um it’s currently in the process of
14:49
being called the quarters um a gate over there actually symbolizes
14:56
basically an entryway to the quarters so it’s not even um from the city standpoint uh going to
15:03
be documented as chinatown you know possibly in the future so that’s going to be interesting with the
15:10
new gate going up because i think from you know a city standpoint you’re just gonna be like
15:16
why is this area called the quarters when there’s clearly a lot of uh you know chinese
15:23
looking monuments around right so
15:29
and i guess how can you expand maybe on like that idea of naming um
15:36
and kind of your thoughts on like what does it mean to name something who gets to name
15:42
something and and what do those names kind of identify and and mean for
15:48
[Music] you
15:54
um so i mean for me i’m pretty like i’ve only started to
16:01
become more aware of city planning uh in the last
16:06
probably two and a half years so it’s still relatively new to me about the processes and even like naming
16:13
itself is a very specific type of city planning process and i’m starting to get to know a little
16:20
more here and there but i can’t at all fully wrap my head around how
16:25
how it works and so yeah from that standpoint it’s just kind of like
16:30
i’m i don’t work within the city and i don’t really you know so i’m just trying to get my
16:36
head around it and uh yeah i can’t really say too much from that
16:41
that part but in terms of naming for me i think i think as a cultural you know i
16:48
i consider myself chinese canadian um like that title and my chinese name
16:54
for example they’re they’re very important to me because they’re part of my identity and they’re part of
17:00
who i am so when i hear about uh south china town being renamed the
17:06
quarters as an official title it it saddens me because
17:13
i think that that area and what it means to the community that
17:18
essentially built it from the ground up um you know uh officially won’t
17:24
have a name for a lot of the really important work that they did for the
17:30
the the community so yeah yeah and i think like moving the
17:36
chinatown gate and renaming neighborhoods um i think it’s
17:41
it indicates what’s important to the city and what’s valuable and i think with the
17:48
quarters um the the motive is to you know uplift this
17:56
community and in a way that is beneficial for the city without acknowledging the existing
18:03
community so renaming a neighborhood
18:09
it erases the memory of the neighborhood and that and the identity of the neighborhood
18:16
and it also um it just speaks to the future of where the city wants to go
18:23
and to me that that’s threatening as a as a person growing up in edmonton as a
18:30
chinese canadian growing up in edmonton um that is a gesture that for me
18:37
means that maybe my identity and culture isn’t really valuable
18:42
in this neighborhood
18:50
so the one thing you do with the collective um
19:00
right so it’s kind of hoping to change at their own surroundings um so what do you hope that that i
19:08
can do to encourage a rethinking a public space for the chinatown
19:15
community yeah i think
19:22
i think as artists and as people who identify as chinese
19:29
canadians i think we’re using like the skills that we have and the um
19:36
and the privileges that we have um to make space in public for our
19:42
community to remember to mourn to celebrate um and and with with our
19:50
work with our work that happens in public space and and happens in community it’s our hope
19:56
is to create spaces of dialogue and conversations so that um yeah
20:04
so that we can come along with our community that’s important to me to us um to kind of think about
20:13
what the future means for us together because chinatown chinatown today means something
20:20
different than 100 years ago and so there’s a need for a reimagining of our future and
20:29
how our future is alongside a very diverse uh
20:34
people groups what about ushan what do you think
20:40
what do you think is gaia’s role um i think in terms of public space i
20:47
mean i’m out here there’s a fence in front of me i’m on a public cycling
20:55
track right and i’ve kind of did like a loop around or just like uh kind of a circle around a bit
21:00
of the the site so you can see you can see it in the in over there and
21:07
one of the interesting things is like people that know that we do work uh around the harbin gate they’ve
21:13
mentioned oh you know it’s really sad seeing that uh the the gate in storage
21:19
like that right like every time they pass the pass by lrt or if you bike over um
21:26
and i mean i mean it’s outdoor in the facility so it i mean right now you can see like this is a
21:33
this is a site for the lrt just to store things and and the city to store things
21:39
and so you see basically just a area to i don’t know i
21:44
mean if you look at it it just looks like yeah just throw your things over there you know like this is storage area just
21:51
put it over there right and so um that within the context of you know
21:57
this gate that’s in limbo and or may not surface back into a
22:02
public space is uh it’s quite sad and so i understand why people
22:08
you know say that it is sad uh just sitting here i mean obviously it’s not gonna get damaged because it was always outside so
22:16
you know we’re not yeah we’re not necessarily like expecting oh that’s cool there’s a
22:23
there’s a friend um yeah so so yeah i i think i think
22:30
um um i think there’s lots to say in terms of
22:36
like our our role as people uh you know uh active citizens here
22:44
in edmonton and and and what we can kind of do in terms of public space and
22:50
and how how we build our cities so so you know this experience for me um
22:57
you know following the harbin gate has really given me a bit more of an understanding
23:03
of how you know we were mentioning naming how to be more involved in these kind of processes
23:08
and these these really i think important uh public ways that citizens can like
23:14
help inform how we shape our city so
23:24
yeah maybe you could just expand on that a little bit of maybe
23:29
what you think that like the role of citizens could be mm-hmm that’s a huge question i know
23:39
yeah i mean i’m still learning so much
23:44
i i think i think one thing that’s been really amazing um working with all the great folks that
23:50
i uh um and and the chinatown community members so not just chinese canadians
23:57
but uh all different uh you know diasporas and and you know we’re seeing also you know
24:04
uh more involvement in the indigenous community ochichi wants popping up in the quarters as well
24:09
and co-lab and so i i think i think that we’re starting to see even
24:15
though it’s the chinatown area there’s more support uh that isn’t limited to
24:21
just the chinese community uh working together you know and i think grace was kind of mentioning that how
24:28
you know historically you know when we even the word and it’s it’s a label that is
24:34
i would say even could be controversial because it indicates that this is an area just
24:40
for chinese canadians or or chinese people right but that that simply isn’t true and so
24:46
having a label like that um and trying to think of the future of chinatown where
24:53
it’s clearly you know very diverse um and and trying to find those unifying
25:00
projects and that solidarity between the groups i think that’s one of the things that i think i’m i’m
25:06
really interested within my own journey and uh and i think that’s exactly where
25:11
the work and eye is gonna go how are we as a community going to shape uh
25:19
what this chinatown is despite you know the the the possibly divisive label
25:26
of chinatown itself yeah yes i agree with you i
25:34
i think we can see that chinatown is there’s are there’s intricacies in our
Inner City
25:40
community like geographically and emotionally like this isn’t just chinatown this is
25:46
also the inner city and these are and and many people live here all
25:52
throughout history many people i lived in this in this space so
25:58
what does what does a um yeah what does
26:05
what’s like with these displacements of our of our community um
26:11
it feels it feels like we’re pushed away so what does a future look like where
26:17
we’re all heard and we’re all respected and public space is shared
26:22
without without having to um uh water down things
26:31
but actually like really value all of our unique um like uh strengths that we all bring
26:39
whether it’s like aesthetics or culture what does it look like what does like what does a diverse a strong healthy
26:46
equitable diverse community look like in public space and does that mean like i think that’s
26:53
really interesting when the biennial it’s called borders and orders are used to
26:59
they can use they can be used to protect or they can be used to divide and labels also do that too
27:07
and with and with the gate um it’s a complex thing because do do
27:13
the gates protect chinatown or do they limit chinatown and um yeah and so and
27:22
when we go past these gates and we see that it’s not just chinese organizations and community it’s
27:28
it’s a multiple of communities um what does that mean what does that
27:33
mean i think it’s hard i think it’s hard for me to imagine what an equitable and diverse community looks
27:40
like because i have no idea i just have no idea i think it’s easy
27:45
for me to like re-imagine what a chinatown community may look like because i can be nostalgic and put
27:52
and point towards what my answers ancestors might have done but i have no idea what a diverse equitable
28:01
public space and community looks like and i think i think it’s a worthy question too to imagine
28:10
and yeah i i think yeah i think that’s super interesting yeah to add to that
28:18
yeah no it’s okay i to add to that as well i think that you know the work that we’re doing could
28:25
be seen as subversive or to cause up um some more tension
28:31
um by you know the chinatown community and and even the city but uh that
28:38
you know certainly and i and i just you know for the record don’t wanna at all implicate that because i think
28:45
um you know we as citizens and i you know have the right to to be
28:51
involved and to be uh you know part of that and so i think a huge part of this work for me
28:58
is is learning about how i can be more involved and by doing some of this work
29:05
see how you know be essentially somewhat of a model to
29:11
how how neighborhoods can be shaped uh with my voice in mind right
29:16
and so i think that’s you know always been even the objective of like what cities want right like if we have more
29:23
input then more people get heard and so
29:29
and so yeah so the work and this entire process is just seeing how
29:35
um this can add to that you know alternative uh narrative that maybe the city and the
29:42
community haven’t heard and yeah i think that’s really important because
29:47
if we’re talking about like a lot of the goals which are like inclusion multiculturalism and
29:54
anti-racism even these terms you know currently they’re not
30:01
necessarily reflected in all the processes that we do and and so yeah how do we how do we
30:07
become uh accountable to more of those types of things
30:19
could you um just kind of maybe expand a little bit on um some of the projects and some of
30:26
the work um and activities that that aya has undertaken
30:32
yeah for sure so one of our first projects is here at the site and i’m going to
Projects
30:40
point to this site um we felt like we were grieving when the
30:46
harbin gate was removed and so we gathered memories and wishes
30:52
of um of the harvest of the harvard gate from the chinatown community and hung
30:58
them on the construction fence and in public space it was just a way for us
31:05
to remember that the harvard gate you know doesn’t exist physically but
31:11
emotionally it’s still in our memories and in our communities thoughts
31:16
um and yeah sean do you want to talk about another project
31:26
yeah so um we in oh man the time
31:33
the times and the years are like just completely past me right now but uh about over a year ago
31:40
uh we um were part of uh the newey blanche uh
31:47
nui blanche edmonton and so we actually set up uh yeah if you look at where
31:53
grace is kind of pointing on her screen in that parking lot in front of
31:59
um the windspeare it’s the windspear i think yeah and
32:06
yeah we set up a a public kind of event called the gentrification
32:13
party and so it’s right across from where the former site uh was and we kind of just really
32:21
wanted to use that as a place to allow the traffic of nui blanche
32:27
uh participants to to to know a bit more about what was
32:33
currently happening because you know uh right now if you look at the the street there’s
32:38
you know the nice new uh rail lines that are there that used to be all like bulldozers and
32:44
construction materials and so even at that point like over a year ago
32:50
it looked very different and so we really wanted to you know involve like people in um
32:58
uh at least like visualizing how uh we really cared about uh all the
33:05
changes that were happening and so having this kind of gentrification party and with with a a number of different
33:13
events like programmed events that were directly on that site uh we were able to
33:18
uh get some pretty interesting conversations and dialogues uh happening on site and i think
33:26
i think uh you know bring people’s attention a bit more to uh i you know what
33:33
the most common conversation is was the the contrast between um
33:40
high development and high living to to the homeless situation and uh
33:47
the urban um yeah the urban uh social services that
33:54
are over there so it really is i think one of the things that we know
33:59
we all know as edmontonians and as probably albertans that there is this really big uh
34:06
difference when we talk about rich and poor and class and and also race right like there is
34:12
some a lot of division there and so how um how does that also uh play into
34:20
these conversations of cultural erasure and uh you know gates being removed and
34:27
and whatnot so i think it it’s it’s very intersectional work um and yeah things that we are actively
34:34
exploring uh within our projects in the future
Ghost Plaque
34:39
and for the aga biennial lindsay
34:47
highlighted a ghost plaque site project so we’re working with the edmonton
34:52
historical board to um install a bronze plaque
34:57
to remember the original location of the harping gate
35:03
so that’s that’s the latest project and we’re really thankful to work with aga and lindsay on the
35:10
programming of the you know of the meaning and the context behind
35:16
this project yeah i wonder if we could just talk a
35:22
little bit more about the the work that you’re showing at the aga because i i think
35:27
[Music] that you know your your practice is not so much like a practice of
35:32
things um if you will like you know there’s there are things of course created
35:37
um and you are creating uh material culture um but it’s a lot of conversation and
35:44
space making and so maybe the both of you could just expand a little bit on you know what was the process like for
35:51
you in picking a work of art that is meant to
35:57
be sort of static in the gallery which you know maybe is not um totally representative of of course
36:04
like the so many different aspects of what your practice is mm-hmm yeah because we’ve been working
36:10
with public space uh for a while we were we had to think
36:16
about how our work would translate in a gallery and with the plaque
36:21
we were really aware of how museums and galleries can
36:27
colonialize objects and especially with an object like a plaque
36:32
i know i was worried about how it would be presented in the gallery and and i was a little bit worried about
36:39
people thinking that that plaque itself is in artwork but that’s not the artwork
36:44
and that led me to questions of what is the artwork and are we are we even making art and does
36:50
that even matter and um yeah so those are those are the questions that we were
36:57
working through and still work through um i mean the question always is what is
37:03
the role of the artist in this context um and sometimes i think maybe making art
37:11
in the traditional sense might not be the best way to address things but um yeah i think it’s a really
37:19
interesting question to keep wrestling through and and um yeah yeah so those are some of my ideas
37:31
yeah no grace has got me like really thinking about it as well because um
37:39
you know along with the plaque uh we’re we’re gonna have a series of of
37:44
programs um like community programs that uh you know we’re gonna try to direct
37:51
people that do that that see the the plaque to to invite them to come out and kind
37:59
of join us in in the community on a few different kind of uh tours around chinatown and and learn
38:05
a bit more and so um you know that that that is uh one of the hopes in terms of
38:12
uh really kind of uh showing the work that we do um as artists and and how you know as
38:19
artists like sometimes we think uh that there has there
38:25
there’s a link between a concrete object right and so um a huge part in grace mentioned this
38:32
as well is the fact that uh so much of what we’re informed by
38:37
is actually through uh what the community and public space and how we interact together uh to
38:44
create uh so so yeah like that in itself um in terms of like inviting uh aga
38:52
people participants that are are there that see our work uh we really hope that they can be involved
38:58
uh within that process as well because especially if they’re edmontonians and they and they’re
39:03
interested in the shaping of what chinatown looks like that that’s essentially uh
39:10
at the heart of a lot of what we’re talking about in terms of uh being able to as citizens like
39:18
shape uh you know our lands and and and uh meet our neighbors and build
39:23
better relationships um so yeah we’re just having a little
39:31
bit of technical problems grace’s phone has just died um
39:37
but i think that this also could be a nice way to
39:49
a nice point to sort of wrath grace neither of you wanted to add about
39:58
about your work um or any sort of uh final comments that you wanted to do
40:05
i was gonna say that was that that was so planned like look at it it’s like perfect maybe grace you can okay
40:15
yeah thank you um no i don’t i don’t have anything i’m just really grateful for making this
40:22
space lindsay
40:29
shawn did you have uh anything you wanted to add before we say
40:36
goodbye thank you everybody out there watching and uh thanks to the aga
40:42
and um yeah the chinatown community uh all our supporters um we
40:49
are like truly yeah very very uh grateful and privileged to have
40:55
all the opportunities to be able to you know work here and so yeah hope to see you around
41:02
in chinatown and and yeah yeah
41:09
all right well thank you to both of you so much i’m so excited to be showing your
41:18
work in the biennial and you can see that at the aga come the end of september
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