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2023 Bio Ariel Urim Chung
12023-04-13T19:51:58+00:00Carlin Liu Ziaf35c69e953cd4001ddc41bd48e720246e1701a0841plain2023-04-13T19:51:58+00:00Carlin Liu Ziaf35c69e953cd4001ddc41bd48e720246e1701a08Ariel Urim Chung (she/her) is a multidisciplinary artist working across performance, technology, and oral history with an aesthetic constructed through trauma studies, embodied research, and her identity as a Korean woman in diaspora. She wakes up everyday, makes food, feeds herself and others, and asks "why do we continue to care?" www.arielurimchung.com
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1media/Promo_Chung_NotInvited_Square - Ariel Urim Chung.jpgmedia/Promo_Chung_NotInvited - Ariel Urim Chung.jpgmedia/Promo_Chung_NotInvited_Square - Ariel Urim Chung.jpg2023-04-13T20:00:50+00:00You are (not) Invited (2023)14You are (not) invited to this dinner party!plain2023-05-18T17:36:17+00:00Ariel Urim Chung
By Ariel Urim Chung
The Kitchen Project is an oral history project recording stories of diasporic Asian mothers, daughters, and non-binary children on their relationship to food and care. Based on this question, “what’s your favorite childhood dish,” the oral histories open up generational stories of caretakers, gender roles, and food as survival or luxury in the Asian diaspora. “You Are (Not) Invited” was an experiment with fluctuating, permeable boundaries of affinity spaces and asks if we can hold that space through listening.
This exhibit was a live event:
Sit down at our table, listen to our food, and let us take you on a journey to our kitchen of food, family, and maternal figures. Asian food is the fastest growing cuisine in the United States. Asian hate crime has risen exponentially in the last few years. People love our food but fail to love us. Do you love 'Asian' food?