Thursday
Mar182010

Katsunobu Yaguchi

Photos: Matthew Stone

Matthew Stone and friends interview Katsunobu Yaguchi

Matthew Stone:  Do you hope to be remembered and what for?

Katsunobu Yaguchi: I don’t know, but if I so, I think I become an American president then people remember me.

MS:  What do you have faith in?

KY: I do faith in myself but I strongly do not faith in myself same time. I think this is a rule of belief for surviving in this world.

Ebe Oke : What unique gifts do you have to offer to this world?

KY: For today. Cancellation of a cellular phone and an internet.
If it’s possible I want to experience the world without a cellular phone and an internet once more.

Todd Hart :  What is the best example of art really changing the world for the better?

KY: I do not know. maybe love, maybe carry on delivery child.

Norman Rosenthal :  Why are we alive at all? It is after all a very strange state to find ourselves in.

KY: I think this is because, we are living in society, not living in the earth.

MS: What question should be added to this list?

KY: How and where do you want to get your death?

Friday
Nov062009

Rafael Rosendahl

Photo: Matthew Stone for Dazed&Confused.

Matthew Stone and friends interview Rafael Rosendahl.

Matthew Stone:  What do you have faith in?

Rafael Rosendahl: I think I am a very calculating person. So faith is not something I am concerned with. I look at something’s past and then i try to think what direction that could go to. I don’t think that’s faith. When it’s about me, I don’t know if my fate is decided or if i have a say. I try to spin it for the good. Sometimes my good intentions backfire, but overall I feel blessed. Knowing that things worked out in the past makes it logical to assume that things will work out in the future.

Catherine Borra : Out of all the possible languages (English, Latin, Spanish, visual, sign, irony, empathy, facial expressions, music, archetypes etc.) available on this earth, which one do you feel you express/would express yourself better in, and why? 

RR: I have not yet really found something. I’m not very good at expressing myself. My work has nothing to do with expression. And when i talk to people I usually dont do a good job at translating my own feelings to words. I start talking too much and wrong things come out that hit much harder than the right things. Language is a world of its own which has nothing to do with my feelings. Thats hard, because there are a lot of things inside that want to find their way out.

Scottee : Solitary or Collaboration?

RR: I like making the decisions. And I love never having to explain a single anything. That happens when you work alone. Sometimes it is scary being confronted with the boundaries of your own imagination, but still I love working alone.

Susanne Oberbeck : What is your vision for a future society, I mean in terms of political system, families, human relations, architecture, reproduction and so on?

RR: I calculated the following: If we have ultimate communication tools in the future, it does not matter if you are right next to someone or if they are on the other side of the earth. If you divide 6 billion people equally over the earth’s land surface, we are all 160 meters away from our closest neighbor.
 
Iphgenia Baal : What is the one thing about you that undermines all the opinions you have made above?

RR: Language is a very primitive technology desperately in need of improvement. I feel very limited because of it. Only a few times in my life have I succeeded to feel free from language and that involved a lot of drugs.

Thursday
Nov052009

Scottee

Photos: Matthew Stone

Matthew Stone and friends interview Scottee.

Matthew Stone:  How can we change the world and what is there to be done?

Scottee: I would like to say art could change the world - although I’m not sure art will solely. I’d also like to say it can’t be done through religion, but possibly through faith, but in reality i know religions change the world, its followers and their opinion greater than any political party in existence. 

I have socialistic values, equality is important.  

I’d like to live in a world where all the major powers signed The Childs Right (Unicef Artical 46) entitling children of their country the right to shelter, protection and clean water - the U.S.A refused to sign this bill. I’d like to live in a world where people were not HIV prejudice - Where people with HIV were allowed into the U.S and government initiatives were in place to empower them back into work and their community. I’d also like to see Gay men who were tested clear of the HIV virus able to donate blood - these are real basic things that could improve the world we live in immensely. 

What is there to be done? There is alot to be done, certainly within my own community - the recent increase of homophobic attacks resulting in murders has increased in the city I call home, the solution to this I’m unsure of - I spent my early career educating teachers & politicians around homophobia & its effects on young people but quickly became tired of feeling as though I spent my life campaigning, and for something my community didn’t care much for. Did i really want to end up like Peter Thatchell with 24 hr police security and bullet proof doors?

Change needs to happen and at a grass roots level - our education system is failing the next generation. Education is knowledge, knowledge is empowerment and empowerment provokes change

Rafael Rosendahl : What is the best place on earth?

S: My council flat. I fought long and hard for it and its a space I feel comfortable in. Its dead small but I have everything I need here and its my own, which i think is a real working class trait - as long as you have a roof over your head you’ll be ok! I have my herb garden to keep myself amused, If look out of my window and can see the whole city, from the Gherkin to BT tower. My next door neighbour is Sue Tilley - shes a dab hand at baking, playing Mum and lending me dresses, what more could you need?!

Susanne Oberbeck : What is your vision for a future society, I mean in terms of political system, families, human relations, architecture, reproduction and so on?

S: Politically - I’m not ashamed to admit I’m a Royalist. I would love to see Liz dissolve parliament and have a stab at it herself, she’s defiantly has more experience than any politician in cabinet to date - ideal for getting us out of this mess we find ourself in. She’s also oddly seen as an international symbol of peace, something which we dont really recognize here but in Canada, Australia & alot of European countries she is widely respected for her work.

Human Relations, reproduction & families wise I’m not sure we will really last that long to develop these, I mean as a species were quite lucky to have lasted this long - our eyesight is isnt very good, we walk on our hind legs, we’re prone to constant infection and rely on medicine for our survival - surely we are due for extinction? 

Nicola Lane : What does success mean to you?

S: Contentment, so I’m keen not to be successful, I never want to feel content with what i do. 

Matthew Stone:  What is most important to you?

S: Progression - not one for usually being quoted on his philosophical lyrics, Mike Skinner (The Streets) puts it well ‘Lets push things forward’. I may never find the answer, the cure or the key but I’ll die progressing, trying, pushing, kicking and screaming. That shall be my greatest achievement.

Tuesday
Nov032009

Susanne Oberbeck

Photo: Matthew Stone

Matthew Stone and friends interview Susanne Oberbeck.

 

Matthew Stone: How can we change the world and what is there to be done?

Susanne Oberbeck: People need to be made aware that trying to prove they are men or women destroys them and others.

Nicola Lane : What does success mean to you?

SO: Success is to be free from constraints, not be oppressed or abused by those in power, and be able to stick to your dreams and beliefs. Success is also if the thing you do leaves an impact on people, moves or inspires them, makes them fancy you, or changes the world, but that’s obvious.

Steph Raynor : Are we anywhere near where we need to be?

SO: I don’t like the use of the word ‘we’. Who is ‘we’? ‘We’ seems to have been used to justify all kinds of atrocities and banalities. Trying to answer your question anyway, I don’t think anybody needs to be anywhere. An ideal or fixed state would be boring.

MS: What should not be left unimagined?

SO: Matthew this question is too complicated! I have written two pages and feel like I’m sounding like an absolute twat. All I can suggest is Bin Laden and people like that should be banned from having an imagination, and people who don’t normally say anything should be able to tell us about their dreams.

I think the less you are a part of existing institutions and structures, the easier it probably is to imagine something that people are trying to tell you is impossible. Why take anything for granted? And what is really “real”?

It kind of comes back to your first question, which I think is mostly about power and conformity. Conforming in order to be powerful, or so they think. If people forgot about the need to prove that they are someone, or someone powerful, it might be possible for example for world leaders or even ordinary people to have an online discussion like this instead of fighting a war. And this is where we arrive at John Lennon’s “Imagine”.

Discuss!

Ebe Oke : What unique gifts do you have to offer to this world?

SO: A unique perspective. BIG Balls.
I like to think I have a unique musical and lyrical instinct. But maybe this is something only Ebe can really answer.

MS: What question should be added to this list?

Susanne Oberbeck: What is your vision for a future society, I mean in terms of political system, families, human relations, architecture, reproduction and so on?

Sunday
Oct192008

Catherine Borra

Matthew Stone and friends interview Catherine Borra.

 

Matthew Stone: What is most important to you?

I don’t know, it depends on what level you are asking! I think there is no one single thing but big groups (or symbols) of values/objects/behaviours and people reflecting into each other that I put together and love. Among these, I think the most important for me is blood.

MS: What do you have faith in?

I believe that people will always go forwards, and even if sometimes it seems that all energy has gone and that this is “the endpoint of mankind’s ideological evolution” (Francis Fukuyama), I have faith in cycles and I know that it is going to change again.

Sometimes, though, I don’t believe it at all.

One kind (I don’t know if it’s the BEST example) of art that I think can change the world is Jiri Kovanda’s series of slight and persevering actions, aimed to reach that space in between invisibility, memory and oddness - or everyday surrealism, and Yoko Ono’s Grapefruit book as well as other of her works. This is because it’s important to me to revive faith, even just for the sake of it, and creativity as a consequence of it; because faith is an extremely important factor of life although currently tends to be discarded.

I believe that art should be active for change now, but I’m not so sure that ‘propaganda’ works and that it allows the freedom of language that art making deserves - every discipline has its own field of action, and given that art isn’t one, it shouldn’t have one in particular…

 

 

 

 

 

 

Norman Rosenthal : Why are we alive at all? It is after all a very strange state to find ourselves in.

I’ve just finished reading a book by J.G. Ballard, one of his catastrophe series about a drowned world (The Drowned World, so to reference it). Time and space after it, seem to be an even more relative set of dimensions to rely upon, because being alive involves an immediacy between past and future that can just not be grasped (by me, at least). In his book, he depicts these human beings that are undergoing the process of rotating their memory so that, because of the environment they are living in, their immediate recollections - or their most recent past, is the revival of their biological memory from millions of years ago, leading to face regression as a prospective and almost as an acknowledged aim. This crashes the present time of subjectivity to something totally irrelevant in the face of the universe and of the infinity of misperception - I highly doubt that we can state with precision that we are alive at all!

Iphgenia Baal : What is the one thing about you that undermines all the opinions you have made above?

They aren’t opinions, it’s true! All, apart from the question regarding the best example of Art really changing the world for the better, and the one about being alive (that is a confusing subject anyway).

MS: What question should be added to this list?

Out of all the possible languages (English, Latin, Spanish, visual, sign, irony, empathy, facial expressions, music, archetypes etc.) available on this earth, which one do you feel you express/would express yourself better in, and why?
- all images (except portrait) sourced & supplied by Catherine -