(An abbreviated version of this interview appeared in the Huffington Post in January of 2012).
Lee Mingwei , “The Quartet Project,” 2005.
Digital rendering of installation. Currently on view at Museum
of Chinese in America (MoCA)
until March 26, 2012. Image courtesy of Lee Mingwei Studio.
Herb Tam is a part of the new wave of younger curators
with dynamic ideas about the role of museums and art exhibitions in engaging
with our communities.
Herb Tam. Image courtesy
of Exit Art.
Julie Chae: Herb,
congrats on recently starting your job as Curator and Director of Exhibitions at
the Museum of Chinese
in America
(MoCA). Have you always wanted to work at a museum?
Herb Tam: Thanks! Working in a museum hasn’t been a life-long
dream, but now that I think about it, I was always addicted to being in museums
in San Francisco : SFMoMA, DeYoung
Museum , Asian Art Museum
and the Palace of the Legion of Honor. I would look at art and historical
materials and try to make sense of why it was made and why I should care.
And we are also showing
another installation project of Mingwei’s called “Quartet.”
But when I started to curate, I actually positioned
my thinking about art against the logic of museums. I thought they were the “enemy,”
part of the conservative establishment of art. I certainly didn’t go into
curating thinking I would work for one.
Exterior
of the Museum of Chinese in America, designed by Maya Lin. Image courtesy of
Maya Lin Studio/ Museum of Chinese in America.
JC: Interesting!
Are you saying you started out organizing exhibitions to critique the art establishment
-- as represented by traditional museums?
HT: When I was young, I needed “enemies” to define
myself, but now, I believe museums are vitally important in helping to
interpret cultural forms in relation to broader issues in society. In this way
they serve an educational function, but we can’t deny that they’re also forms
of entertainment and distraction. This makes being a curator in a museum a much
trickier proposition in terms of dealing with who our audience is and who we
want them to be.
JC: And how did
you end up working in the arts as a curator?
HT: I went from being an artist to being a curator 7
years ago. I made that decision on a plane from Amsterdam
to New York
and it was pretty liberating; I felt physically lighter when I made the
decision to stop making art. I was a painter and that practice was getting
narrower and narrower as far as what it allowed me to think about. Curating
allowed for a lot more of my interests to come into the process. So that now
things like cultural identity, hip hop, history, sports, art, anthropology,
architecture, politics, technology, environmental issues, etc. are in play as
far as subject matter, where before much of that would be irrelevant to the
artistic process. I see curating as a form of thinking and processing what’s
going on in the world, just like making art.
JC: You have
written about a wide variety of topics, such as hip hop, basketball, writing,
politics and history. To me, that just shows you have a genuine interest in
culture, which encompasses all sorts of things related to people, what they
value and what give their lives meaning. But many museum curators like to give
the impression they have very focused interests, centered around their area of
expertise. How do you reconcile your responsibilities to MoCA’s audiences and
mission with your interests outside the institution?
HT: I sometimes admire those curators who are so
focused on one area in a deep way, but I’m not that way. Over time, I believe
that all my interests will be explored at MoCA and that’s because the core of
what we’re trying to do is to describe the Chinese experience in America in all
its complexity. The subjects I’m interested in that you list are things that
many people of all ethnicities are interested in. I feel like if I stay true to
who I am and also remain sensitive to what others are interested in, the shows
will be relevant to our audiences.
JC: Will you
share with us an exhibition you found particularly satisfying to organize and
perhaps meaningfully shaped your curatorial outlook?
HT: I’m really proud of a show I did at the Jamaica Centerfor Arts and Learning (in Jamaica ,
Queens ) called “A Jamaica, Queens Thing.” It
was about how the crack cocaine epidemic in the 1980s affected rap music and
included contemporary art and historical material. The area in and around Jamaica has
been a really fertile breeding ground for rap music since the 70s. Run DMC, LL
Cool J, Russell Simmons, Ja Rule, The Lost Boys, 50 Cent, Lloyd Banks and a
bunch of lesser known artists all came from there and, at the same time that
rap was developing as a musical form, Jamaica and other inner city
neighborhoods across the country were being decimated by the crack epidemic.
“A Jamaica, Queens Thing,” Installation View, 2007, Jamaica Center for Arts and Learning, NY. Image
courtesy of Jamaica
Center for Arts and
Learning.
“A
Jamaica, Queens
Thing,” Installation View, 2007. Work by Corey D’Augustine (foreground) and Daragh Reeves (video projection and drawing), Jamaica Center
for Arts and Learning, NY. Image courtesy of Jamaica Center
for Arts and Learning.
HT: Given
all this, there was a real intimate relationship between work in the show and
certain people in the community. A lot of visitors got real nostalgic about
some of the historical material in the show, and then one day, Pretty Lou, a
member of the disbanded Lost Boys, heard about the show, came and saw it and
wondered why some of their materials weren’t included. So he came back a couple
days later with a framed gold record of one of their big hits, “Jeeps, Lex Coups,
Bimaz & Benz” and offered it for the show. We found a good place for
it, hung it and it looked great.
“A
Jamaica, Queens
Thing,” Installation View, 2007. Work by Sol’Sax, Jamaica Center
for Arts and Learning, NY. Image courtesy of Sol’Sax and Jamaica Center
for Arts and Learning.
HT: Through the show I met a DJ who was active in the
70s and 80s in Jamaica
named Cipher Sounds (not the one who’s on Hot 97 now). He let me borrow some of
his old party posters for the show and we talked a lot about the neighborhood,
the history of hip hop, the crack thing and his childhood. The most important
thing about that show for me was how much I was able to learn from these guys
and how my ideas about this specific history I was exploring actually changed
through talking with them. That show really changed the way I think about doing
exhibitions.
“A
Jamaica, Queens
Thing,” Installation View, 2007. Work by Daragh Reeves, Jamaica Center
for Arts and Learning, NY. Image courtesy of Daragh Reeves and Jamaica Center for Arts and Learning.
JC: What is your
vision as Curator and Director of Exhibitions for MoCA?
HT: I see MoCA doing really challenging exhibitions,
exploring parts of our history and experience that are underrepresented or
misunderstood. It must be a place for deep scholarship as well as consistent
experimentation and dynamism with the exhibition form.
Core
Exhibition Hall: “With a Single Step: Stories in the Making of America .” Permanent exhibition designed by Matter Practice/mgmt. design, with lighting by
Marcus Doshi. Image courtesy of Maya Lin Studio/ Museum
of Chinese in America .
HT: I come from an art background and while we’re not
strictly an art museum, I want to do more with it because contemporary art can
really add layers of meaning, translation and interpretation to history and
experience that other materials just can’t come close to. Our audiences are
pretty diverse in all categories, but we’d like to see attendance increase from
all groups, tourists and locals alike. We have a great education program that
serves many of the schools in and around Chinatown
as well as from all over the city. I want us to be the museum where ideas about
who Chinese people are and what Chinese culture is today get processed.
Courtyard
(original early 20th century building detail) inside the Museum of Chinese
in America ,
along with views of “With a Single Step.” Image courtesy of Museum of Chinese
in America .
JC: MoCA
currently has two exhibitions featuring critically-acclaimed artist Lee Mingwei. One of them, “The Travelers,” appears to explore
individual narratives that make up the collective experience of people leaving
their “home.” How did this exhibition come about?
HT: On October 20, 2011 we opened an exhibition by
artist Lee Mingwei, concurrent with his show at the Brooklyn Museum .
Mingwei, who was born in Taiwan
and moved to the U.S.
when he was 13, is a conceptual artist whose work usually involves audience
participation.
Lee
Mingwei, “The Travelers,” 2010. Detail of journal. Image courtesy of Lee
Mingwei Studio and Museum of Chinese in America .
HT: In this show, he’s presenting a project we commissioned
in 2010 called “The Travelers,” in which he sent out 100 scrapbooks to friends
and acquaintances with instructions to fill out its pages with stories of their
leaving home, and then to send on to someone they know, so others can do the
same. The books are meant to keep travelling and collecting stories in their
journeys. Mingwei has created a reading room installation with these scrapbooks
and we have created a separate website and blog to go along with the
exhibition.
Mingwei works very closely with
institutions and is very sensitive to the particular missions, rhythms,
limitations and intricacies of each. We asked him to think of a project that
would expand on a key part of this museum as a place that collects and saves
history of the Chinese in America
narrative.
Lee
Mingwei, “The Travelers,” 2010. Image courtesy of Lee Mingwei Studio and Museum of Chinese
in America .
HT: I think what he identified was
that the story we tell is quite grand in its arc and privileges dramatic
moments and points where a narrative turns dramatically. This is of course a
very natural thing for museums like ours to do because we can’t get into
granular detail about specific people or events. For the museum he has offered
a bit of a counterpoint: inviting the sometimes idiosyncratic perspective of
average people and what stories they associate with leaving home, a universal
emotion that resonates with immigrants from all parts of the world.
Lee
Mingwei, “The Quartet Project,” 2005. Installation view. Image courtesy of Lee
Mingwei Studio.
JC: What upcoming
MoCA exhibitions are you planning?
HT: Opening in April 2012, we’ll be
doing a photography show about how America is seen through the Chinese
lens, including contemporary art photographs and old historic documentary
photos. During the same time, we’ll be doing an exhibition about the Tiananmen Square protests in 1989 and its coverage in
Asian American press.
Tseng Kwong Chi, Grand Canyon , Arizona ,
1987, silver gelatin print. Image courtesy of Paul Kasmin Gallery.
JC: As we’ve
discussed, you’ve spent a lot of time in museums and thinking about them. How
is working at MoCA a little different from working at some other museums?
HT: An important part of MoCA is that
we describe an experience that is so often omitted and overlooked. And a big
part of what we do is assert that experience, through cultural forms and
historical narrative, so that representations of us don’t solely come from the
often misinformed mainstream media. There needs to be a counterbalance for all
the stories about American jobs disappearing to China and for the one-dimensional
portrayals of Asian Americans that still persist.
Unknown
photographer, Untitled, Date Unknown, Collection of Museum of Chinese in America .
HT: In short, we’re here to describe
the experiences of being Chinese in America , both historically and in
the present-day. This is educational in nature, but to me the shows have to be
dynamic and we have to be creative in the way we tell these stories so that
exhibitions don’t feel like pages from a textbook, but rather like having a
really thought-provoking conversation at dinner. This is where the
entertainment side of things comes in, but that word has such negative
connotations. I always say of museum work that it’s show business. Chinese
culture and the Chinese experience in America are alternately strange,
wonderful and sad and we have to be bold in the way we describe it.
Unknown
photographer, Music Palace on Bowery, 1989, Collection of Museum of
Chinese in America .
Herb Tam is the Curator and
Director of Exhibitions at the Museum
of Chinese in America . He lives and works in New York and was born in Hong Kong .
He was the Associate Curator at Exit Art from 2007 to 2011, where he
presented exhibitions such as:
“Alternative Histories,” a 50-year survey of alternative spaces in New
York; a retrospective of Guatemalan performance artist Regina Jose Galindo;
“New Mirrors: Painting in a Transparent World”; and “Summer Mixtape Volume
1,” an exhibition exploring the role of pop music in the work of emerging
artists. Previously, as the Acting Associate Curator at the Queens Museum of
Art, he co-curated “Queens International
2006: Everything All At Once,” a
biennial of Queens-based emerging artists, and coordinated an exhibition on the
work of Robert Moses, the influential former New York Parks Commissioner. Herb
was a founding member of Godzookie, a collective of Asian American artists and
arts professionals that was formed in 2001.
“The Travelers” and
“Quartet” by Lee Mingwei will be on view at the Museum of Chinese in America,
215 Centre St., NY, NY until March 26, 2012. For more information, see: http://www.mocanyc.org.
Daragh Reeves, people – herb reflect, 2003. Image courtesy of Daragh Reeves and Herb Tam.
This post is a
part of a series I am informally calling "The Cultural Landscape
Architects." They are art world professionals who play a role in
connecting art with the public. They decide which artworks by which artists are
presented, place the art in the contexts of both art history and current times,
and help shape the cultural landscape. You can find more at www.juliechaeprojects.com.