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Life-size cardboard sculptures of Chinese villagers that celebrate artist's ancestors

Six years ago, American artist Warren King travelled to China for the first time, to the village where generations of his family had lived. During this trip he was approached on the streets by people who, amazingly, had memories of his grandparents from when they had lived there before the Chinese Civil War – people with whom he shared a cultural, racial, and ancestral connection but a connection that was severed when his grandparents left that place 50 years ago.

His latest work, Shaoxing Villagers, a series of life-size figures made with only cardboard and glue, is an ongoing project to recreate the residents of his grandparents’ home village one individual at a time. The commonplace, discarded materials that he uses relate to the nature of the connections he is attempting to reconstruct. The forms are abstracted, and the backs of the figures are left unfinished, revealing hollowness and the artist’s meticulous construction.

His work is not so much about the individuals that are represented as it is about his own attempts to understand them, and also the limitations of these efforts. You can discover more of his beautiful work at wrnking.com or follow Warren on Instagram.

© Warren King

© Warren King

© Warren King

© Warren King



This post first appeared on Art & Design Blog | Creative Boom, please read the originial post: here

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Life-size cardboard sculptures of Chinese villagers that celebrate artist's ancestors

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