Connect Magazine Japan #95 July 2020

Page 28

Untitled; Asian Winds series Dust, ink, gum arabic, and honey on paper 34 cm x 25 cm (H x W) Private collection

Untitled (Dust Pic) Dust, ink, gum arabic, and honey on paper 25 x 34 cm 2019

From Dust to Dust:

Anthropocene Art Adventures in Asia

Michelle Zacharias (Saitama)

Writers are always advised to write about what they know and the same thing applies to artists and their art as well. What, in my everyday life, is unique to me and how could I express that in visual form? The flowers in my garden? The Tokyo art world dismissed them as simply “pretty.” I needed something more conceptual, unique, and more representative of myself. Being an outsider? Maybe. My allergies? Bingo!

well as other pollutants, blowing across the entire Asian continent. I felt like I had to push it further and tried painting portraits on masks, but that felt too gimmicky. At the same time, I tried self-portraits dirtied by the suggestion of air pollution by using layers of plastic. I was trying to use coloured pencil since I had developed a reputation for using that medium in unusual ways, but I felt I had to stress the conceptual aspect even more.

Having lived and worked in southern Japan in the shadow of a huge chemical factory that looks like a science fiction metropolis, I’ve been regularly exposed for many years to aeolian dust—or, yellow dust—which comes from the semi-arid areas of the Asian continent, such as the Gobi Desert in China, as well as toxins from the factories in the area.

Then I got the idea to make paint from the dust in the air. Yes, that’s right. D-U-S-T. I even asked the staff at Pigment, an incubator for artists in Tokyo where I had been taking occasional classes if they thought it might work. Pigment focuses on traditional Japanese materials, such as specially crafted, lacquered-handled brushes, to help preserve artistic traditions and introduce them to artists. One of their regularly held classes teaches how to make paint from the powdered pigments, made from crushed stones, clay, or minerals, that line their walls.

As a prairie girl, I developed sensitivities to the smog and other types of pollution that surfaced annually and had reactions that were similar to allergies but are actually common reactions to smog or fine particulate matter (called PM 2.5 in Asia). The Kyushu area has more yellow dust than PM 2.5 and the Kanto area has more PM 2.5 than yellow dust, but both areas have yellow dust and PM 2.5. I have become an expert on the different reactions triggered by each of those two types of dust and rarely need to look at the details of the air quality index (AQI) anymore. So, why not use my art to talk about air pollution? I started drawing the flow of air across China—the spring winds which carry yellow dust from the Gobi Desert as

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Pigment’s staff agreed, albeit a bit reluctantly, that my idea should work in theory. They even emptied the Roomba vacuum cleaners and gave me their dust! They also suggested using a glass muller to crush the particles for a smoother paint. To prepare the dust, I filter out bugs, cat hair, leftover popcorn, and other bits from the vacuum. More than 80% of the household dust blows in from the outside. Japan is semi-tropical with bugs everywhere, so I zap the dust in the microwave to kill any mites.


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Letter from the Community Editor

2min
pages 128-129

by Nathan Post

1min
page 143

by Mark Christensen In Jesus’s Name (R)Amen by Erica Park

10min
pages 134-142

North Japan’s Premire Locations for

6min
pages 114-119

Bad Guys Doing Good

6min
pages 130-133

Journey Through Magic by Lillian

9min
pages 120-127

Letter from the Travel Editor

2min
pages 112-113

Vamos Tokyo Carajo! by Niall Devine

8min
pages 102-105

Letter from the Sports Editor

2min
pages 100-101

Creating Through Cosplay

14min
pages 88-99

Capturing Tokyo’s Music Scene

4min
pages 86-87

Letter from the Arts Editor

2min
pages 84-85

Terrace House: A Window into Japanese

8min
pages 80-83

At Home in the World by Connor Mclead

6min
pages 76-79

Interview with Kabuki Actor Taiki

15min
pages 66-73

Letter from the Culture Editor

2min
pages 74-75

1000 Worlds Clash at Tokyo Game Show

18min
pages 56-65

Letter from the Entertainment Editor

2min
pages 54-55

6 Festivals in 6 Days: The Tohoku Tour

8min
pages 42-45

Fall Styles in Kyoto by Madelin Yochum

6min
pages 50-53

Vouge’s Fashion Night Out by T. Harris

5min
pages 48-49

Letter from the Fashion & Beauty Editor

2min
pages 46-47

Letter from Events Editor

2min
pages 36-37

The Snake that Played with Fire

5min
pages 38-41

A Folkin’ Good Time by Erica Park

8min
pages 32-35

From Dust to Dust by Michelle Zacharias

8min
pages 28-31

Finding Community Against All Odds

7min
pages 14-17

Working for the Kyoryokutai

9min
pages 6-9

Ohara Gozaimasu by Mike Clapis

6min
pages 22-27

Letter from the General Section Editors

2min
pages 20-21

Slaying the Cosplay Game

2min
pages 18-19

Japansplaining by Hannah Lukow

3min
pages 10-11

Letter from the Assistant Head Editor

5min
pages 12-13
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