This artist's haunting work tells her grandmother's history, from internment camp to WWE fandom

'My grandmother never spoke about that history...For me it's like I'm a bit of a detective'

Media | This artist’s haunting work tells her grandmother’s history, from internment camp to WWE fandom

Caption: Vancouver-based artist Cindy Mochizuki has made a monumental art project out of digging into her family's history.

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Cindy Mochizuki(external link) is an interdisciplinary artist based in Vancouver. Her multimedia projects manifest stories, dreams and memories into layered installations that incorporate photography, video, sound, animation and performance. And at the core of her practice is a fascination with how we tell and remember stories, with a large body of her work investigating her own family history and the experience of trauma and displacement around the Japanese Canadian internment(external link).
"My grandmother never spoke about that history, so I would never get it in a very linear way," she says. "It would be maybe in snippets — it would maybe be in what she didn't say, and maybe what she left behind. For me it's like I'm a bit of a detective trying to figure out or piece together something."
Using a mix of video, live-animation, sound, archival material and tiny hand-made objects, her performance Compass tells the story of her grandmother as an entrepreneur and a berry farmer in B.C. first before the war, then in post-war Japan and finally returning to Canada with her family in the 1960s.

Image | Cindy Mochuzuki

Caption: (CBC Arts)

In this video, Mochizuki contemplates the difficult yet rewarding nature of making artwork about family history. "I think there's a great joy in honouring somebody who maybe her history wasn't not talked about, but had such a significant impact...It's maybe even why I continue to make work."
Video of the performance was recorded as part of Cinevolution Media Arts Society(external link)'s Digital Carnival(external link) 2017. You can find out more about Cindy Mochizuki here(external link).
Watch CBC Arts: Exhibitionists(external link) on Friday nights at 12:30am (1am NT) and Sundays at 3:30pm (4pm NT) on CBC Television.