An confidential group of 3 of performers, known basically as three, have been working together on politically motivated art installations that integrate a playfully colorful visual. Using independently covered items of sweets and fish-shaped soy sauce packets, the performers have designed a variety of performs that encourage audiences to communicate with them.
For their set up named Eat me, three developed a clinging set up in the shape of a home loaded with sweets packed in brightly colored wrappers. Each line involved a multitude of the goodies (about 7,000 in total) that guests of the display at Shiseido Egg Collection were welcome to pick off and eat. Visitors were basically requested to eliminate of the wrapper in the allocated area of the space where, by the end of the display, there was nothing more than a load of colorful junk. The representational visuals of a home being transformed into a load of waste is indicative of the damage from the earth quake and tsunami that hit three's home town of Fukushima, Japan.
Being straight suffering from the natural catastrophe, their work is highly suffering from that experience. Their set up named Tokyo Electric shows a 3 meter-tall box developed in the range of the Fukushima atomic power place. The framework purposely contains 151,503 colorful fish-shaped soy sauce containers, which is the exact variety of removed people in the consequences. Their other performs named Tokyo Void and Tokyo Surge are similarly indicative of the life-altering activities.
Three Tokyo Electric Void Surge Eat Me Studio Photo
Source : three website