‘Being a foreigner in Australia, I feel you are constantly a kind of ambassador of your culture, and it is often difficult not to get stereotyped.’
Read More‘Learn your rights. Join your union.’
Read More‘You can’t get better and not be vulnerable. You learn this. You grow older. You no longer believe that you are made of ruins.’
Read More‘When you've got a camera you're a step back; you're looking at a scene without really taking part in it. You're actually watching it rather than participating, in that way.’
Read More‘Be honest. Be vulnerable with yourself, especially if you can’t be vulnerable with others around you…’
Read More‘When you go to the Blue Mountains and you see that one Chinese restaurant that has those chopsticks fonts written on the outside, that’s the Asian mimicry typeface I’m talking about.’
Read More‘General practice and writing are good companions. One skill essential to both is empathy.’
Read More‘I can’t get out of the habit of thinking of words, lines, and the spaces between as another kind of music.’
Read More‘I am displaced from the place I have left and still disconnected to the place that I have moved into.’
Read More‘Mystery on the internet is a bit overrated.’
Read More‘I think it’s a personal responsibility to seek complex narratives and dialogues that drill more critically in to Australia’s history as an environmental, colonial, immigrant, global and Indigenous space.’
Read More‘I’ve waited my entire life for media that accurately represents me and all of my identities, with dignity and authenticity. It never came. So we decided to make it ourselves.’
Read More‘Asian-Australians are a community and identity with a history unto ourselves, and screw anyone who challenges us on it.’
Read More‘People want to laugh as well as learn more about themselves. It’s the comedy of curiosity.’
Read More‘First and foremost, I bring my cultural contexts to my work. That’s why I put my cultural and religious identities in my biography, even though this may be seen as crass or too pointed.’
Read More‘I've seen a big shift in the way that people book female, gender-diverse and POC artists over the past few years in Sydney.’
Read More‘The cultural criticism I enjoy writing the most originates with a question or a concern that I’m unable to resolve.’
Read More‘When you make social or political work, you do it with the hope that it might contribute to changing the world in some small way, and so you are building the future.’
Read More‘I’ve come to appreciate that history and our collective capacities are as important as one’s own capacity.’
Read MoreI really do believe in art as a refuge.
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