Essays

New York City Garbage is Some of the Best Art by Mirena Rhee

I've always been in awe of New York City garbage, it's unlike any other place because I've had garbage in California and Florida and Cincinnati but in New York, there are rarely back alleys so everything is on the curb.

The cost of real estate is so high that it makes absolutely no sense to store anything at home, storage units and moving are very expensive. So a lot of the time, it's the easiest to put things you don't need on the curb. So other people who need them could take them home.

My friend furnished his entire studio from the garbage, including his work table, cabinets, stretcher bars and even canvases that he repurposed and repainted.

I didn't have any furniture in my apartment to begin with, but when I needed something, I took it from the garbage.

I moved my entire San Francisco apartment to New York City and then gradually shed stuff as I moved around the city. Before and after every move, I put stuff on the sidewalk.

Heavy hand-woven wool carpets I had bought in Bulgaria and schlepped all the way to my house in San Francisco and then to New York all of a sudden became useless and a huge burden. I had nowhere to store them, and selling them seemed like a big project that I didn't want to undertake compared to what I would make if I simply worked the same amount of time.

It's really surprising that when time and space are at a premium, a lot of stuff immediately shifts in value, and once prized possessions become burdensome to even give away for free.

There are many varieties of garbage on the curb, entire living rooms with cabinets and entertainment centers and lamps, entire bedrooms with beds and mattresses, and children's toys. There's beautiful packaging around Christmas and New Year's. And sometimes there are mountains of boxes and bags piled higher than a human for almost a city block.

Many of these were like spontaneous installations. I was really fascinated with photographing them. Many times, I observed arrangements that were more interesting than what was in the galleries in Chelsea.

Once I saw a show of Arte Povera, or poor art from Italy, at Hauser and Wirth on 22nd street. It was from the '60s. It was one of the most beautiful garbage I had ever seen. Italy is one of the most talented nations on earth, art architecture fashion cars opera, and it seems, garbage.

I did very little work transforming garbage objects into artworks because what was interesting to me was the unadulterated spontaneity of garbage. But sometimes I got inspired by specific objects I found.

Once I found a pristine tomato red sled, another time I found a thrown-away painting where the back looked much better than what was on the front. I painted the back white and hung apple peels on the wire. The apple peels looked very much like strange hieroglyphs made out of my favorite food, so I called the piece apple peels kanji, after my favorite minimalist country, Japan.

There isn't any garbage in Japan! Nah, just kidding. Of course, there is, but you have to look for it. I remember going at night to a seedy part of Tokyo, if there is such a thing, it may have been Akihabara, yeah, there was garbage in the street.

I don't know about garbage, but I remember sitting at a cafe in Tokyo once, and looking out and across the street, there was a teenager talking on the phone, pacing back and forth, and at one point he bowed, to whoever he was talking to on the phone. I swear.

One summer, I spent a month cleaning my local park in Greenpoint, Brooklyn. I spent a lot of time collecting garbage and emptying trash cans. It was back-breaking work, but I ended up meeting a lot of my Polish neighbors who came out to help, and talked to the people in the park. Some park guests used me for improvised therapy sessions, and one customer of the men’s restroom used my sunglasses instead of the broken mirror to fix his hair.

My idea for Zero Art came to me when I saw people carrying doggie bags and small garbage bags and randomly cleaning the park. What if people collected found objects in small bags, arranged them into mini installations, and took nice pictures? Ephemeral and useful Zero Art.

A friend and I once had the idea to go around and take pictures of ourselves getting comfortable in garbage bedrooms on curbs around Manhattan. We'd pretend to drink coffee in a curbside living room, we'd photograph ourselves against all kinds of trash, and make spontaneous art pieces out of it.

I always wonder about the lives of objects. People hoard objects and carefully care for them in their homes. And then all of a sudden, one day these objects are not needed anymore and then end up on the curb. An object was once very useful and beautiful and had a great relationship with its owner. It was cared for and carefully dusted. Years would pass, and the object would become a witness to many life events in a home. There was always a special purpose in how it was brought in, why it was brought in, how it was picked, and how it was used. Many gifts and family heirlooms, loved for a long time and with long histories inevitably land in the garbage.

There are very few generational mansions with stuff in the US. Even Grand houses often get sold and resold and redecorated, and the old stuff gets thrown out.

Once during the pandemic, I saw a picture of Gwyneth Paltrow posing with a mask on a plane, and I thought why don’t they put up pictures of the street sweepers of New York City and the garbage men who continue to collect our trash and sweep our streets despite the whole world going inside.

I remember vividly that I couldn't sell my taekwondo gear for some reason. I'm not sure why I couldn't push it through eBay or Craigslist. I had become a yellow belt at taekwondo when I lived in the suburbs of San Francisco and had bought all the responsible gear, including shin guards and chest guards. In New York, I had to fight for my life and art, so I had no time to fight people's shins anymore. I just left them all on the street in Brooklyn. It became just like one of my installations.

On Art And Government by Mirena Rhee

Just like Salvador Dali says I basically used New York City to train my retina. He calls this the historical retina. Historical retina is very important.

In Silicon Valley, I was able to train my retina first on the best of commercial work, work with really great people, and second, I made some money, so I was able to visit the greatest museums in the world in person.

I think the biggest mistake tech people make is that they don't see much art, and they don't understand art which is terrible. Art can only be done in person, the screen is not the way to consume art.

Music, just like Salvador Dali says, is not really the greatest art because it doesn't employ the greatest organ, which is the eye. Music is an inferior art.

Throughout history, influential people understood art very well, they used art and architecture as part of their influence and understanding of the world.

Tech people try to understand machines. They do not concern themselves much with 1. Art and 2. The public good. Which I think are quite related.

Some very talented business people promise a future of abundance but we already have abundance because we are the richest country in the world. You go to New York City and see all the empty real estate and all the empty stores and then you go and see all the terrible homeless shelters where more than 100,000 children suffer being homeless. I don't see a reason why we can't reconcile the fact that we're the richest ever and the fact that more than ever, there are people who need help.

Of course, just like Martin Luther King Jr. viewed employment as a fundamental right and a cornerstone of human dignity, social justice means jobs. There will never be social justice without enough jobs, and this is what the politicians get wrong.

Politicians always just want to get elected so they think that social justice means more politics. In America, on top of that, we have campaign financing which is directly like a market economy for politicians. They only have an incentive and are beholden to the money.

Politicians have never been about the good of society. I think we should abolish politicians and strive for absolute and direct democracy. I think Athenian democracy should be the way we govern ourselves, of course, sans the slavery.

I think any average American will be able to perform any government job just as well as any other. So I really like the idea of not electing or appointing public servants but letting random people serve. In that way, we will avoid people getting entrenched in public service.

Friday Flash - Dune, possessions, pumpkins, road ahead, my personal hypocrisy by Mirena Rhee

I remember reading a science fiction short story, I think, a novel where you could put on glasses and read an entire planet. I think to be an artist is to somehow gradually put these glasses on and once you have that Vision it's impossible to unsee it. Where there are objects like apples or paintings or buildings or people, you see primordial soup and electric storms, and some abysses and heavens.

Holiday gift guide:

Make your loved ones an installation. Food installation, spell their name with cucumbers and bananas. Spell their name with clothes, make art piles in the hallway. Let your kids and your spouse draw on the walls, convert your kitchen cabinets to library and art closets, curiosity cabinets and mystery storage.

Road to New Minimalism:

The ultimate goal is to build a space-faring creative civilization.

We have to be very careful with what we create, because I believe we're mini-Gods, and this is why I think that handbags and cutting up diamonds are not really our job anymore. Don't get me wrong, I absolutely love fashion, I love people who are nicely, beautifully dressed, but I can't justify in my mind digging up crystals from the ground, cutting them up and decorating ourselves with them, and conditioning young people to also be into cut up crystals, they do not need body decoration to feel self-worth. A well-disciplined body is beautiful, but diamonds are ugly. Handbags are even more trashes than actual garbage, and even less useful. Don't get me started on weddings, bonding ceremonies are fine, I just can't think of a reason why so much energy is expended to create one-of-a-kind throw away objects.

Whenever I look at bonding ceremonies and all kinds of other activities I always use first principles and try to look objectively at the activity and reason.

We need to really carefully rethink our values as a civilization. It seems to me that the media promotes the values that promote the agenda of their advertisers, of course.

The media never promotes what is valuable to humankind, science, learning, well-being of the body and mind, creative and forward thinking.

We are virtually mind slaves of the advertising industry, which perpetually produces ever more crap for us to desire.

I am actively trying to unsee most of the stuff that is on the internet.

Google was something useful and beautiful. Now I have to hunt for technology to block me from seeing all the ads. I have several ad-blocking add-ons on my browsers, otherwise, I cannot stand looking at anything on youtube or websites. I refuse to look at ads, and frankly, I'll boycott anything that I see advertised on anything. If I am not buying it already - I don’t need it, period.

I have resorted to Android as I cannot find anything reasonable to block ads with on an iPhone, although the iPhone takes beautiful pictures. My mind’s space is just too valuable.

I gave up television for the same reason. I can’t stand looking at ads,  cannot imagine something less useful to our civilization, and refuse to accept the digital landscape as it is evolving into an adscape today.

I believe one day artists will spin neutron stars and draw in gas clouds.

Video games are very very successful because they combine art and technology, computing and creativity.

I just realized that paintings with text were the first memes.

Art offers a profound experience that just can't be compared to anything else. Art is not trivial, it is profound.

I spent my entire life sharpening my ability to see, all my realizations about the material world have come from placing intense gaze on things.

Having just binged on Dune, I thought we are all Pre-born through reading.

Art is basically like tasting melange and feeding on melange every day. I was also born pre-spiced, with blue eyes.

I also cannot stand pumpkins and can live without seeing one for the rest of my life. I think they are pretty brutal visually, can’t someone just think of something else?