Name Tao Wells | ||
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Tao Wells launches new Easier artist publication - Press Release Audio
Tao Wells is a New Zealand Artist and a voluntary community conceptualist, whose work is known for its critiques of established systems of power and value.
Contents
- Tao Wells launches new Easier artist publication Press Release Audio
- The recycling of child poverty in new zealand by tao wells
- Early life
- Works
- Personal life
- References
The recycling of child poverty in new zealand by tao wells
Early life
Wells was born in the United States, but moved to New Zealand at a young age. He completed a BFA in photography at Canterbury University and a MFA at Massey University in Wellington.
Works
His 2010 work "The Beneficiary's Office" was managed by his creation of a 'Public Public Relations' organization called "Wells Group". The performance was part of a larger series of temporary projects curated by Letting Space in Wellington. "The Beneficiary's Office" was controversial in its promotion of the opportunities and benefits of unemployment in an effort to criticize contemporary ideas of work.
"We need to work less, so we consume less. The average carbon footprint of the unemployed person is about half of those earning over $100,000", "We should never be forced to take a job. If you're forced to take a job it's a punishment. If a job is a punishment then all we are building as a society, is a prison".
"I believe that, the true artists of our times, are the politicians and PR companies and the Lobby groups, that are creating the frames, for how we interpret reality."
The initial media coverage incorrectly reported that he received funding of $40,000 for the art project. Creative New Zealand released a clarification, stating that the total amount for Wells' show was actually $3,500. As a result of the media coverage, he had his benefit cancelled by Work and Income, with Wells and a welfare advocate questioning the illegality of WINZ's decision, it was reinstated.
American writer Chris Kraus compared the Wells Group project with the concerns of French philosopher Simone Weil and the Italian NO WORK "Movement of 77'.
"What you did Tao, I thought, was incredibly courageous and profound... To be both dependent on that system and to so publicly expose the issues around that system was very brave... to be a public beneficiary that's about as bad as it gets. "
Writing by Wells has appeared numerous times in the magazine White Fungus.
Personal life
He lives with his partner in Te Waipounamu, Ōtākou, Ōtepoti.