No Power to Push Up the Sky (2001)
By Lana Lin
23 minute video by Lana Lin, 2001 No Power to Push Up the Sky takes its name from a literal translation of the slogan 23-year-old student leader Chai Ling wrote on her clothes during the 1989 Tiananmen Square protests. In an interview conducted in Beijing on May 28, 1989, one week before the massacre, Chai Ling recalls this expression of the students' sense of helplessness. For the video, fifteen people spontaneously translate into English excerpts of her original Chinese interview. The video also features running headlines from Western newspapers and journals that chronicle the Tiananmen Square events. Both forms of translation demonstrate the complex process of locating meaning across language, culture, and politics. By positioning translation as an interpretive act, the video points to the subjective motivations underlying any understanding and narrativization of history. Sharon Hayes Unstable Realities: The Work of Lam Kin-Hung and Lana Lin Lin's video installation lakes its name from a translation of the slogan 23-year-old Student leader Chai Ling wrote on her clothes during the 1989 Tiananmen Square protest. In No Power, the artist asks 15 people to read and spontaneously…
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