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  1. L0tus Bl0ss0m

    The work L0tus Bl0ss0m is a tale of two people meeting in a subway. One of them, a cleaning lady, seem to suggest similar ideas as the philosopher Jacques Derrida, while the other helps her with the garbage in exchange for hearing her thoughts.

    The work was published on Young-Hae Chang Heavy Industries' web page in 2002 according to the Internet Archive's Wayback Machine, and was converted to video format around or after 2018.

    Meri Alexandra Raita - 30.09.2011 - 14:45

  2. Riviera

    Set in the usual monochrome style and with a jazzy soundtrack synonymous with Young-Hae Chang Heavy Industries' work, Riviera introduces a new element: division of the screen into four horizontal spaces. In each of these spaces, text flows past—horizontally in the English version of the work, vertically in the Chinese—at different rates, each providing different views of the Hae-Oondae Sea.

    The work was published on Young-Hae Chang Heavy Industries' web page in 2002, according to the Internet Archive's Wayback Machine, and converted to video form around 2018.

    Meri Alexandra Raita - 02.10.2011 - 13:43

  3. All Fall Down

    Set in the usual monochrome style of Young-Hae Chang Heavy Industries, the work All Fall Down focus on the fact that everybody will fall down eventually, saints, doctors and bums alike. The work has two seperate narrations and it is near impossible to follow both at the same time as the pace in this work is fast. The work is set to a jazzy soundstrack featuring a long drum solo set to the famous groove from Dave Brubeck's Take Five.

    The work was published on Young-Hae Chang Heavy Industries' web page in 2002 according to the Internet Archive's Wayback Machine.

    Meri Alexandra Raita - 02.10.2011 - 13:50

  4. Orient

    This poem from circa 2002 contains the same linguistic text— that is, the same sequence of words— as the 2003 “Nippon” but it is a very different work.

    “Orient” is set to the tune of “B. Quick” by Sonny Rollins, which makes it last slightly over 9:13. This song is a fast-paced bebop that sets an urgent, desperate, even frantic tone - making your heart race and eyes tear as you try to keep up with an aggressive reading pace. Stick with it and you’ll end up exhausted and bewildered as your brain gets taken through what reads like a stream-of-consciousness narrative about cheerful men who go to a bar and interact with desperately bored women whose job it is to make them feel at ease.

    Meri Alexandra Raita - 02.10.2011 - 13:58