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Entertainment May 19, 2026

Grayson Perry’s Life Story to Hit Stage in ‘Outrageous’ Musical

A new stage musical, “Grayson the Musical,” will dramatise the life of Turner‑prize winning artist …
Grayson the Musical will bring the eccentric life of Turner‑prize winning ceramicist Grayson Perry to the stage in an “outrageous” production co‑created with composer Richard Thomas, the mind behind Jerry Springer: The Opera. The show, billed as an “irreverent odyssey,” explores Perry’s journey from his Chelmsford childhood to international fame, with a supporting role for his iconic teddy bear Alan Measles.“Grayson the Musical” Takes Shape with a Workshop Run in JulyThe workshop production will be staged at Soho Theatre Walthamstow in east London, the borough where Perry kept a studio for many years. Director Sean Foley leads the team, while Perry himself provides the lyrics. The book is written by Sara‑Ella Ozbek, known for screenwriting and novels.Workshop Schedule and Production Team Reveal Key NumbersFive performances scheduled from 16 to 19 July.Music composed by Richard Thomas.Lyrics by Grayson Perry; book by Sara‑Ella Ozbek.Directed by Sean Foley.Venue: Soho Theatre Walthamstow.Cultural Resonance of Perry’s Story in London’s Theatre SceneThe musical taps into Perry’s reputation for challenging class norms, gender expression, and pop‑culture references. By featuring Alan Measles, a beloved element of Perry’s visual art, the production bridges his gallery work with live performance, offering audiences a rare glimpse into the artist’s personal narrative and the broader themes of identity and self‑acceptance.What’s Next for the Musical After the Workshop?Following the July workshop, the production is slated for further development, with the potential for a full run beyond the initial five shows. Success in the workshop could position the musical for a larger West End engagement, expanding its reach and cementing Perry’s legacy in both visual and performing arts.
#Grayson Perry #Richard Thomas #Soho Theatre
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Sports May 19, 2026

Aaron Rai's Historic US PGA Win Ignites Golf Inspiration in Wolverhampton

Aaron Rai became the first Englishman since 1919 to win the US PGA Championship, inspiring a new ge…
The Historic VictoryThere was a real buzz and sense of pride at the 3 Hammers golf complex in Wolverhampton, the old stomping grounds of Aaron Rai, who on Sunday became the first Englishman since 1919 to win the US PGA Championship. It was the first major title of the 31-year-old's career and Rai described it as "truly a dream come true." "It's phenomenal to think of how many things have gone into it and extremely rewarding to be stood here," he told Sky Sports.The Journey to GreatnessFor Rai's childhood coach Darren Prosser, who taught Rai for about two years, it was a proud moment. "Very proud," he said. "Very pleased for him and his family and it's great for golf to get one of the nice guys winning it." Prosser, who teaches at his own academy in Kingswinford, recalled spotting Rai's talent early and said his dedication and hand-eye coordination was beyond his years. "When he went up playing on the golf course, he could play all the shots around the green," he said. "His work ethic, how hard he worked, and guided strongly by his father, Amrik."Family Sacrifices and SupportRai's golfing passion appears to have started almost by accident when he suffered a nasty bruise on his head after playing with his older brother's hockey sticks. In search for a safer alternative, his mother, Dalvir, bought him plastic golf clubs. Rai paid credit to his parents and wife in a press conference after his win, describing how is father had quit his job to support his golfing career and been with him "every day that I went to practice from the age of four to five". "My mum has been absolutely incredible as well. She worked extremely long hours to just provide for the house," he said. "I can't put into words how much they've done in terms of support, the care and love. I wouldn't be here without them."The Financial RewardIn addition to becoming the first non-American to win the Wanamaker trophy on Sunday, Rai landed a $3.69m (£2.76m) prize. This significant victory not only marks a personal achievement but also represents a substantial financial reward that will further support his career and family.Inspiring the Next GenerationHis journey from Wolverhampton to golfing history has already inspired six-year-old Adam Rai Jr, a keen golfer who started training at the 3 Hammers from the age of 18 months. Adam attends the golf club around three times a week and was lucky enough to meet Rai in November 2025. During the visit, Adam's dad cheekily told Rai's team they were related, because of their shared surname, and the family were able to meet the golfer and his family. Adam Sr said: "He's probably the most genuinely nice, calm very pleasant [person] to be around. Very welcoming."The Ripple Effect of SuccessFive months later, Adam Sr received a phone call out of the blue from Rai's father inviting the family to attend the Masters tournament in the US. "It [was] like winning the lottery," Adam Sr said. Describing his reaction to Rai's historic win, he said it was "really emotional". Adam Jr's mother, Emma Blower, said Rai's win showed success was obtainable. "So we're saying: 'If Aaron can do it, you can do it,'" she said. Asked what impact Rai's win would have on him, Adam Jr said: "Do more golf!"The Future of Golf in WolverhamptonProsser and Adam Jr's trainer, Jess Warren, said Rai's win would encourage more people, from a diverse range of backgrounds, to consider taking part in the sport. "Seeing someone from the same training ground reach the top of world golf proves to young golfers that with dedication and practice, anything is possible," Warren said. Prosser added: "[Rai] has been mega dedicated and come through the ranks, [and] it's nice to see that it can actually be done." This victory is expected to have a lasting impact on golf participation in the Wolverhampton area, potentially creating a new generation of dedicated players inspired by Rai's success story.
#Aaron Rai #US PGA Championship #Wolverhampton
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Sports May 18, 2026

Aaron Rai Wins PGA Championship, Celebrations Begin with Chipotle

Aaron Rai, a 31-year-old golfer from Wolverhampton, became the first Englishman to win the PGA Cham…
Aaron Rai's Historic Win Aaron Rai's life changed on the 18th green at Aronimink, but his lifestyle didn't. Rai, 31 from Wolverhampton, became the first Englishman to win the PGA Championship since 1919, earning himself $3,690,000, and a lifetime exemption to the tournament doing it, and promptly said he was going to celebrate it all by going to Chipotle. The Celebration Plans “I haven't thought that far ahead just yet,” Rai said when he was asked how he would celebrate. “He'll probably have Chipotle,” his wife, Gaurika Bishnoi, cut in. Presumably he's buying. Rai's Historic Achievement Rai only found out about the hundred-year jinx on Saturday night. “There's been a lot of incredible and historic English players over those hundred years,” Rai said, “players who have gone on to achieve incredible things and had phenomenal careers, so to win this event and then to be the person that's the first one to have won it in a long time from England is an amazing thing and something to be extremely proud of.” The Secret to Success Rai said that the secret to steering his way through one of the most congested leaderboards in the history of major golf was to simply ignore it. “Honestly, I didn't look too much at the leaderboard,” he said. A Childhood Idol As a kid, Rai used to watch and rewatch VHS tapes of Tiger Woods' early successes. “We used to watch them a helluva lot, probably two, three times a week, if not more,” he said, “the videos of his US Amateur wins and then his early professional career. He's such an icon and such a huge figure in the game … and he's someone that I really idolized. I just remember being in awe just watching all of the things that he could do.”
#Aaron Rai #PGA Championship #Chipotle
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Sports May 15, 2026

Emma Raducanu Rehires Coach Behind Historic US Open Triumph

Emma Raducanu has rehired Andrew Richardson, the coach who guided her to her historic 2021 US Open …
The Return of a Championship PartnershipEmma Raducanu has rehired Andrew Richardson, the coach who helped guide her to her sensational US Open triumph in 2021, on a formal basis as she prepares to return to competition next week in Strasbourg in the buildup to the French Open.Richardson will accompany Raducanu at the WTA 500 event as she competes for the first time in two months after being sidelined by post-viral illness. During the early days of her return to the courts, Raducanu travelled to Richardson's base at the Ferrer Academy in La Nucía, Spain, near Benidorm, for a clay-court training block that doubled as a trial period for a potential formal partnership.In a statement, Raducanu said: "Grateful to have reconnected with someone who has known me for over a decade now and looking forward to building together one iteration at a time."A Historic Collaboration RenewedRaducanu and Richardson have a long history, with the pair first working together during her youth. Raducanu had been working with Nigel Sears at the beginning of her breakthrough summer in 2021, before joining forces with Richardson in July. Their partnership yielded one of the biggest surprises in tennis history as Raducanu won the US Open that year as a qualifier without dropping a set.Less than two weeks later, Raducanu controversially chose not to extend her coaching partnership with Richardson, which had begun on a short-term interim basis. This decision generated significant discussion, with many suggesting it would have been beneficial for Raducanu to continue with a familiar face who had worked so successfully with her at a time when so much of her life had instantly changed.A Pattern of Coaching ChangesThe decision not to continue with Richardson marked one of the first of many coaching changes for Raducanu, who has since struggled to find the right person to guide her on a permanent basis. Raducanu last worked with Francisco Roig for six months before the pair parted ways in February. Roig now coaches the six-time grand slam champion Iga Swiatek.Raducanu travelled to her most recent tournament, Indian Wells in March, with the LTA coach Alexis Canter. Considering how much scrutiny her life and career still generate, Raducanu has constantly sought out familiar faces she knew before her breakthrough in 2021.Quest for StabilityHer longest coaching stint was with Nick Cavaday, another of her childhood coaches, with whom she worked for more than a year until he stepped away because of personal health matters. Her return to the top 30 last year was a result of her partnership with Mark Petchey, another person with whom she worked before her breakthrough, whose tennis broadcast work meant they could work together only on an ad-hoc, informal basis.Now she has returned to the coach who helped her to her greatest achievement, suggesting a renewed focus on stability and proven results as she continues her career in the highly competitive world of professional tennis.
#Emma Raducanu #Andrew Richardson #US Open
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Entertainment May 15, 2026

Backtalker Review: Kimberlé Crenshaw’s Memoir Illuminates Intersectionality and Resilience

Kimberlé Crenshaw’s memoir *Backtalker* recounts a life shaped by Jim Crow segregation, family grit…
Executive Overview: A Memoir of Hope Amid SegregationBacktalker by Kimberlé Crenshaw is a candid autobiography that traces her upbringing in Jim Crow Ohio, the loss of family property through eminent‑domain, and the intellectual journey that produced the theory of intersectionality. The Guardian’s review frames the work as both a personal testament and a call to recognize ongoing racial inequities.Crenshaw’s Journey from Segregated Ohio to Intersectionality TheoryThe narrative begins with childhood episodes—being cast as a witch instead of a princess, a Black family’s defiant return to a drained public pool, and her father’s brief legal career—illustrating the daily “backtalk” that forged her resilience. At Cornell she discovered Derrick Bell’s scholarship, and at Harvard Law she confronted the stark absence of Black faculty, prompting protests that foreshadowed her later legal activism. A pivotal case involving Emma DeGraffenreid’s GM lawsuit revealed the limits of Title VII, inspiring Crenshaw to articulate the concept of intersectionality.Publication Details and PricingPublisher: Allen LaneRelease date: 2026Price: £25Available through: guardianbookshop.comWhy Crenshaw’s Story Reshapes Understanding of Race, Law, and Public MemoryThe review underscores that Crenshaw’s personal history mirrors broader systemic patterns—racialized eminent‑domain, under‑representation in elite academia, and the legal blind spot that ignored overlapping discrimination. By linking intimate family anecdotes to national moments such as the Clarence Thomas hearings, the OJ Simpson trial, and Barack Obama’s election, the memoir demonstrates how individual “backtalk” can influence collective legal and cultural narratives.Looking Ahead: The Enduring Relevance of BacktalkerAs debates over voting rights, reparations, and campus diversity intensify, *Backtalker* is positioned to become a staple in both scholarly curricula and public discourse. Readers and educators are likely to cite Crenshaw’s account when arguing for more nuanced anti‑discrimination policies that address the intersecting axes of race and gender.
#Kimberlé Crenshaw #Backtalker #Intersectionality
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Environment May 15, 2026

Britain Launches First‑Ever Vote to Crown Its Favourite Butterfly

The charity Butterfly Conservation has opened a nationwide poll to decide which of the 60 native sp…
The Inaugural Nationwide Butterfly Vote OpensFor the first time, the charity Butterfly Conservation has opened a public poll to decide which of the 60 native species will be crowned Britain’s favourite butterfly. The vote runs until 7 June and is being promoted as a celebration of the country’s long‑standing affection for these insects.Poll Mechanics and Participation Figures60 species eligible, ranging from the iconic purple emperor to the once‑common small tortoiseshell.Voting is hosted at britainsfavouritebutterfly.co.uk and is free for anyone in the UK.A recent Butterfly Conservation survey identified butterflies as the most‑loved childhood creatures, providing a strong base of potential voters.Why the Vote Matters for ConservationThe poll builds on previous citizen‑science initiatives such as the Big Butterfly Count and the “favourite bird” competition, turning public enthusiasm into measurable support for habitat protection. By highlighting species that are thriving (e.g., the purple emperor) alongside those in decline (e.g., the small tortoiseshell), the campaign aims to channel attention and donations toward targeted conservation actions.Potential Outcomes and Future ImplicationsBeyond the headline winner, the vote is expected to generate:Increased traffic to Butterfly Conservation’s educational resources.Higher volunteer sign‑up rates for upcoming counts and habitat‑restoration projects.Data that could inform policymakers about public priorities when allocating funding for biodiversity.Looking Ahead: What Comes After the Vote?After the poll closes on 7 June, the charity plans to publish a “Britain’s Favourite Butterfly” report, featuring regional breakdowns and recommendations for protecting the highlighted species. The momentum may also inspire similar polls for other invertebrates, reinforcing the role of citizen engagement in the UK’s broader environmental strategy.
#Butterfly Conservation #Purple Emperor #Small Tortoiseshell
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Entertainment May 13, 2026

The Harder They Come: How a Jamaican Classic Captured 70s Culture and Conquered the Stage

The Harder They Come, a groundbreaking reggae musical based on the 1972 Jamaican film, returns to t…
The Cultural Phenomenon Returns On a chilly morning at a Silvertown studio behind London City airport, the sunburst intro to Jimmy Cliff's The Harder They Come is on repeat. Dancers run through a routine studded with reggae and dancehall moves. "Get high," commands associate choreographer Neisha-yen Jones with a smile. "Get low!" The ensemble rise and dip. They do the bogle and whine around each other as their watchful director Matthew Xia nods along. They circle Natey Jones who breaks out the opening line: "Well, they tell me of a pie up in the sky." In the distance, a plane leaves the ground. From Film to Theatrical Celebration It's eight months since The Harder They Come's full-throttle takeoff at Stratford East, where the musical was so popular that it is now returning for a second run which will also serve as a eulogy for Cliff who died in November. Playwright Suzan-Lori Parks' adaptation of Perry Henzell's 1972 Jamaican film is bolstered by a handful of her own songs as well as classics including Israelites and Wonderful World, Beautiful People – plus every number on the film's monumental soundtrack. Jones is reprising the role of Ivan (played on screen by Cliff and inspired by real-life outlaw Rhyging), who arrives in Kingston from the country and is dismissed and exploited, before becoming both a hit singer and a fugitive. The Evolution of a Cultural Narrative The original was akin to cinéma vérité, directly evoked spaghetti westerns and veered into blaxploitation territory; Ivan's tale has gained greater warmth, humour and protest spirit on stage. It was the best musical I saw in 2025. "The story is a tragedy but the theatrical event is a celebration," says Xia of his production. Twenty years ago, the film was adapted as a musical with a book by Henzell, also at Stratford East. "It all started at Ivan's Nine Night," Xia recalls. "There was a massive poster of Ivan on the wall, with everyone coming, and it was told in retrospect with vignettes." Choreography and Cultural Connection Shelley Maxwell, recently arrived from Jamaica, was watching the musical in the audience one night and has since become the choreographer of the new production. She has fused the folk dance forms of revivalism and pocomania, learned in her childhood, with reggae, dancehall and moves that today's teenagers can recognise. "I wanted to tap into the youth market," she says. It's brought some enthusiastic feedback from audience members who may not know the film. "Like: 'Oh my God, they did that step I always do at a party!' It allows them to form a connection." Authenticity and Cultural Representation Xia, wearing trainers in the Jamaican flag's colours, and Maxwell, whose tracksuit has the same black, green and gold trim, were intent on instantly transporting their audience to Kingston. The opening, says the director, is an "establishing shot" with characters coming and going on Simon Kenny's magnificent multi-level set, accompanied by Toots and the Maytals' hit Funky Kingston. To borrow from its lyrics, you really can believe everything they do. Even each move in the dominoes game we see is scripted, explains Maxwell, who mapped out the market scene with precision: "Where are you going to? How heavy is the item that you're holding? This is the swing of the hips." Social Commentary Through Performance Xia, whose father came to England from Jamaica in the 1970s, praises the freewheeling realism of the film. "Lots of the background performers are just whoever happened to be in the market that day, or walking through the shantytown. Lots of the actors were people that Perry knew, they had no training." Henzell, says Xia, showed "the part of Jamaica that had always been hidden, people living hand to mouth". The musical depicts a "quartet of oppression" against Ivan, as he takes a stand against individuals representing hypocrisies of the church, law, drugs trade and music industry. Universal Themes and Contemporary Relevance The Harder They Come was both a pioneering example of independent film-making for Jamaicans and a portrait of a newly independent country. Maxwell, who grew up glued to Hollywood musicals, says it was empowering to discover a film full of the Jamaican songs she loved. "I was probably way too young when I saw it. But what I saw was the world around me." She traces how different forms of music played a pivotal part in the country establishing its identity, moving from African forms and American R&B; to mento, ska, rocksteady, reggae and the rise of Bob Marley and Jimmy Cliff. Maxwell captures that chain reaction with a tantalizing question: "What's this groove becoming?" Transforming the Narrative for Modern Audiences The musical also makes its hero's actions more understandable. "In the film, Ivan becomes a kind of wanton murderer," says Xia. In the musical, "he accidentally shoots a police officer when he's under threat, is remorseful, yet also knows that if he gives himself in then that's the end of his journey". Another significant change is the depth given to the principal women – Ivan's mother Daisy and Elsa, with whom he falls in love under the eye of her authoritarian guardian, the preacher. "The moral heart of the piece now resides in those two women," says Xia. Maxwell transforms a brief sequence from the film, in which Ivan imagines a tryst with the devout Elsa, into a floor-trembling set piece when the preacher's congregation lose their robes to indulge in lustful fantasy. The male gaze of the original scene is duly excised: "it had to be like it was both of them in partnership in that fantasy world," says Maxwell, who adds that the nature of dancehall – "grinding, gyrating on another body" required her to use her skillset as an intimacy director.
#The Harder They Come #Jimmy Cliff #Jamaican culture
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Health May 13, 2026

Prenatal Veggie Exposure May Shape Kids' Taste Preferences, Study Finds

A small study led by Prof Nadja Reissland at Durham University found that fetuses exposed to kale o…
Study Shows Fetal Exposure to Vegetable Flavours Influences Post‑Birth PreferencesThe research team gave pregnant volunteers powdered kale or carrot capsules during the third trimester and later measured their children’s facial reactions to the same smells. Reactions were recorded via ultrasound before birth, repeated at three weeks, and again when the children were about three years old.Methodology: Kale and Carrot Powder Capsules Administered to Expectant MothersParticipants were asked to swallow a capsule each day containing either kale or carrot powder. The study avoided large volumes of juice, which many volunteers found unpalatable, opting for a low‑cost capsule format.Capsules administered in late pregnancy (around 32 weeks gestation).Initial chemosensory response captured with ultrasound imaging.Follow‑up assessments at 3 weeks and 3 years post‑birth.Sample Size and Observed Reactions Reveal Early Flavor MemoryAlthough the cohort was modest, the findings were consistent:12 children were observed at age three.Infants exposed to carrot powder smiled when presented with a carrot scent and grimaced at kale, and vice‑versa for the kale group.The same preference pattern was evident in the ultrasound scans before birth.These results suggest that flavour exposure in utero can create a durable chemosensory memory.Potential Public‑Health Benefits of Early Dietary ConditioningIf replicated on a larger scale, the approach could offer a low‑cost strategy for improving population nutrition:Reducing childhood resistance to vegetables may lower long‑term risks of obesity and diet‑related diseases.Capsules are inexpensive and could be integrated into routine prenatal supplements.The concept is adaptable to different cultural diets, as noted by the researchers’ interest in fish‑rich Japanese diets.Next Steps: Larger Trials and Cross‑Cultural ApplicationsThe authors acknowledge the need for a bigger, funded study to confirm the effect across diverse populations. Future research aims to:Expand the sample size to hundreds of mother‑child pairs.Test additional flavours and odourants, including artificial sweeteners.Explore policy pathways for incorporating flavour‑exposure capsules into prenatal care guidelines.Published in Developmental Psychobiology, the paper titled “Do Human Fetuses Form Long‑Lasting Chemosensory Memories?” opens a new avenue for early nutritional interventions.
#Durham University #Prof Nadja Reissland #prenatal nutrition
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Entertainment May 12, 2026

Artist Sung Tieu Recreates Childhood Home as Monument to Immigrant Workers at Venice Biennale

Artist Sung Tieu has recreated the Berlin housing complex where she lived as a child at the Venice …
The Artist's Monument to Forgotten WorkersAn air of civilisational wipeout hangs over the Gehrenseestrasse complex, an abandoned housing estate on the north-eastern outskirts of Berlin, where the city still looks shabby without the chic. The insides of the nine prefabricated blocks have long been gutted; six floors of empty window frames stare hollow-eyed over multi-lane carriageways. In the courtyard, paintballers have left behind wooden barricades from when they played at World War III.Yet in one of the second-floor rooms of Berlin's largest ruin, artist Sung Tieu is waltzing across the concrete floor and reliving scenes from her childhood. "Here was the single bed I shared with my mother for three years," she says, pointing into a corner of the small room. "Two metres by 90cm, can you believe it?" There in the corridor is where her neighbours used to make bánh bao dumplings on camping stoves, for lack of private kitchens. "I still remember the smell." Here was the door through which she used to entertain her best friend when his mother locked him in during working hours. "We played cards through the gaps," she recalls with glee.But she also still remembers where neo-Nazis tried to throw molotov cocktails into the building: "They eventually set up a net because the windows kept on getting smashed".The Mosaic Recreation of a Lost CommunityThese days, few people have heard of the Gehrenseestrasse complex, whose last tenants left in 2002. But if Tieu had her say, it would be as essential a stop on the tourist trail as the Brandenburg Gate, the Reichstag or Checkpoint Charlie. There is, in her view, no place that better tells the story of the Vertragsarbeiter generation – the oft-forgotten workers who were hired on fixed-term contracts from socialist "brother states" in Vietnam, Mozambique, Angola or Cuba to boost the East German economy. "To me, this place is a monument," says Tieu.By the end of this summer, many more people in Germany – and art enthusiasts around the globe – will know about her childhood home. For this year's Venice Biennale, Tieu has clad the German pavilion with a like-for-like replica of the complex's facade, recreating the grey concrete and smudges of graffiti with three million mosaic stones made in Ravenna. She conceived the pavilion in tandem with the artist Henrike Naumann, who died in February from cancer aged only 41.Bureaucracy as Artistic MediumThe woman I meet at a Vietnamese restaurant in Berlin's Lichtenberg district is the antithesis of that exoticised cliche: modest, dressed all in black, analytical in her answers to my questions. She talks me dispassionately through the more experimental food options on the menu, but comes alive when explaining bilateral treaties and labour regulation."I really try to avoid the pure post-migrant diaspora narratives. By focusing on individual experience you can lose sight of the bigger picture. Contracts, state treaties, floorplans – that's what I am interested in. There has to be a certain formal toughness."Looking through her catalogue raisonné you are reminded of Marcel Duchamp. You see an artist dedicating her career to seeking ever more minimalist ways to express the same idea, from Cubist painting to readymade to annotations of chess moves. And in Tieu's case, that big idea is bureaucracy. In 2015, she reprogrammed the scrolling LED displays at a shop inside the Dong Xuan Centre, Berlin's largest Asian market, to display the texts of immigration treaties. For a group show at Berlin's Haus der Kulturen der Welt in 2024, she transcribed by hand documents from the national archives on the East German porcelain industry, authenticating them with her own ornamental stamp. Her website, fittingly, is just a long index of file names and a deadpan biography section: "Sung Tieu is an artist."Childhood Trauma and Artistic Vision"I think it's also a childhood trauma," she says when I ask her where her interest in bureaucracy comes from. "I've had to fill out forms for my mother since I was five, since she didn't speak any German. And by the time I was seven my German was better than hers. Bureaucracy was part of my childhood – I studied politics and administration because I wanted to understand it."Born in 1987 in Hai Duong, northern Vietnam, Tieu moved with her mother to what was by then the formerly socialist East German regions in 1992. They were joining up with her father, who had moved to the GDR five years earlier via a bilateral agreement for factory workers from the socialist republic.Initially announced in the romantic spirit of ideological solidarity, the treaty between the two states soon became a more hard-nosed deal, addressing ongoing labour shortages in East Germany while helping to rebuild a war-ravaged Vietnam, which took a...The Legacy of Forgotten WorkersTechnically there was no racism in the GDR, because it wasn't documented. But of course it always existed. This is the uncomfortable truth that Tieu's installation confronts – the erasure of immigrant experiences in official narratives, even as these workers were essential to East Germany's economy.Through her art, Tieu transforms personal memory into collective history, giving voice to the thousands of contract workers who built East Germany but were never fully acknowledged as part of its society. The Venice Biennale installation, with its meticulous recreation of a housing complex that many would prefer to forget, serves as both memorial and critique – a reminder that the stories of immigrants are integral to understanding modern Germany.The Future of Migration Narratives in ArtAs Europe continues to grapple with questions of migration and identity, artists like Sung Tieu are pioneering new forms of expression that move beyond personal stories to examine the structures and systems that shape immigrant experiences. By focusing on bureaucracy, architecture, and official documents, Tieu creates art that is both deeply personal and universally relevant.The Venice Biennale platform ensures that these often-overlooked histories reach a global audience, challenging visitors to reconsider their understanding of migration, labor, and belonging. As Tieu continues her exploration of these themes, we can expect more installations that transform bureaucratic systems into powerful artistic statements, creating spaces where the voices of the marginalized can be heard and remembered.
#Sung Tieu #Venice Biennale #Berlin
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