TEHCHING HSIEH
Widely considered to be a legend in the history of performance art, Tehching Hsieh was born in 1950 in Nanjhou, Taiwan. Dropping out of high school early on, he dedicated himself to experimenting with various styles of painting. In 1974, having found employment as a ship worker, he left Taiwan and entered the United States near Philadelphia, later moving on to New York. He remained an illegal alien for several subsequent years, working menial jobs for a living. In 1978 he embarked on his legendary series of “One Year Performances” and by 1986 completed five of them. In the first performance (1978-1979), Hsieh locked himself up in a cage he constructed. An editioned print of a documentary picture from the performance is included in this exhibition. In the second (1980-1981), he attempted to punch the clock at every hour. In the third (1981-1982), he lived outdoors for a whole year, never entering any building or interior space, as represented in this exhibition through elements including a poster, a statement, a map, photographs, and a film. In the fourth (1983-1984), a collaboration with Linda Montano, the two artists were tied to each other, with a rope around their waists, and were never alone for the duration of the performance. In the fifth (1985-1986), he did nothing that pertains to art.
From 1986 to 1999, Hsieh worked on the “Thirteen Year Plan,” whose details remain unknown to date. On January 1, 2000, he officially announced that he had kept himself alive and would stop making art completely. Since a solo exhibition at the Museum of Modern Art in 2009 and participating in several group exhibitions at venues including the Guggenheim Museum, he has occasionally discussed his only remaining project of constructing a museum dedicated to his lifework.