From a phonograph cylinder unearthed at the archive, artist Taey Iohe invites you to delve into migrating sounds, echoing planetary protests.
Kang Hong Sik's 1914 folk song encapsulates a century-spanning narrative of time ruptures and longing for home. Surrendering to auditory space, we explore nature's perpetual movement, from mountains to beings, amid currents of resistance.
About Taey Iohe
Taey Iohe is a migrant art worker, a slow gardener, and a queer mother who creates and follows stories of decolonising botany as a practice through an Asian crip/queer feminist lens. Their approach fuses research-based work with personal narratives that challenge the socio-botanical entanglements within medicine culture, and climate justice.
- Featured in
- Migration Matters