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AS IT IS 2015-04-18 San Francisco Artists Make Art from Trash 旧金山艺术家利用垃圾进行艺术创作
Trash and garbage are other words for waste – things that people no longer want or need. In San Francisco, they are also words for art.
A local recycling company, called Recology, created a program to give artists the opportunity to re-use unwanted objects. Artists are paid to work for four months on transforming things like old tires, toys and paint.
Ma Li is one of the artists at the center. She is working on a project that includes plastic bottles, cardboard1 tubes and cloth. Ma Li is turning them into a moving sculpture with stars, flowing air and dancers.
Ms. Li says she learned2 recycling from her parents while growing up in China in the 1980s. It was a time when the country was poorer and more concerned about saving3 money than it is today.
San Francisco artist Michael Arcega works4 with recycled wood and old leather belts, all saved from the garbage.
“My project is based on pseudo-anthropological research on the people of the Nacirema.”
Michael Arcega explains that “Nacirema” is “American” spelled backwards5. His artwork shows what he says is the wasteful6 culture of the American people. Still, he says looking through the trash is not easy. It is hard to separate what is useful and what is really garbage.
A gallery in Los Angeles is displaying some of the art from the San Francisco project. The show includes pictures made from pieces of labels, sculptures from old metal, and saws that have been cut to look like trees.
Each year more than 5,000 children and adults visit shows created by the artists. They also attend educational tours that allow the public to talk to the artists and learn important lessons about recycling.
Los Angeles gallery owner Liz Gordon says artists have a history of recycling.
“People who didn’t have the resources to be able to go out and buy supplies found supplies and have been using found objects and assemblage for many, many years.”
Artist Ma Li says these art works have a message.
“So everyone can come together to actually make little change in their daily life and behavior to actually try to save the environment and resources.”
Mike Sangiacomo heads the recycling company. He says he hopes to see as much waste as possible reused.
“Along the way, if some of it is made into some fun pieces of art and draws people’s attention to the issue, we think it’s a great way to do something that’s good for our business, good for our community, good for society.”
And the project shows how a little imagination can change one person’s trash into another’s art work.
Words in This Story
recycling – adj. related7 to using something again
tubes – n. long hollow8 objects
labels – n. material attached to something to identify or describe it
saws – n. tools with sharp teeth used to cut wood
assemblage – n. a group of people or things
1 cardboard | |
n.硬纸板,卡纸板 | |
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2 learned | |
adj.有学问的,博学的;learn的过去式和过去分词 | |
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3 saving | |
n.节省,节约;[pl.]储蓄金,存款 | |
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4 works | |
n.作品,著作;工厂,活动部件,机件 | |
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5 backwards | |
adv.往回地,向原处,倒,相反,前后倒置地 | |
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6 wasteful | |
adj.(造成)浪费的,挥霍的 | |
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7 related | |
adj.有关系的,有关联的,叙述的,讲述的 | |
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8 hollow | |
adj.空的,中空的,空心的;空洞的,无价值的 | |
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