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How One of the Whitney Biennial Protesting Artists Spends Sundays
Korakrit Arunanondchai just presented his most ambitious project to date, a live show with multiple performers over two nights.
Whether dousing himself with paint, petting crocodiles, or transforming 85-foot boats into works of art, the Thai artist Korakrit Arunanondchai is constantly pushing boundaries.
Earlier this year, Mr. Arunanondchai was part of a group of artists who withdrew their pieces from the Whitney Biennial when it became known that the museum’s vice chair, Warren B. Kanders, was the owner of a company that distributes law-enforcement equipment, like tear gas canisters. (Mr. Kanders would later resign his position at the Whitney.)
On Nov. 12 and 13, Mr. Arunanondchai, 32, presented what he described as his most ambitious project to date. “Together” was a live performance featuring more than a dozen people, including the artist himself, at the Harlem Parish as part of the Performa 19 Biennial.
“It feels really heavy and really complicated,” he said. “Even though, in theory, it only happens for two nights, and at most 500 people will see it, it feels much bigger in scope and scale. It’s something you can experience and live, but you can’t hold onto it forever.”
Mr. Arunanondchai, whose work is also on view this month in Venice and Singapore, lives in Chinatown, a neighborhood that he said reminds him of Bangkok.
FAMILY FIRST I wake up around 10, answer emails in bed for 40 minutes, and then make a really light breakfast. I really concentrate on my healthy beverage game. I try to juice my own oranges every morning. A lot of times, I’ll have to talk to someone in Thailand. If I wake up at 10 a.m., it’s 10 p.m. there. I’ll call my dad or mom for maybe an hour as I’m cleaning or getting ready to leave my house — getting family day done.
ANCIENT HISTORY I listen to an audiobook as I shower and water my plants. I’m not a great reader. For the past two months I’ve just been listening to different audiobooks about Gobekli Tepe. It’s a temple in southeast Turkey. I just visited it. It was built 12,000 years ago. Somehow it’s just nice to wake up, before I’m fully awake, and listen to pre-culture stuff.
CORTADO There’s this really nice coffee shop called Oliver Coffee. I’m totally addicted to coffee now. I drink a cortado with oat milk every morning. I could make a cortado if I had one of those big coffee machines, but it would take up my entire kitchen.
DIM SUM For the first part of the day, I don’t walk anywhere for more than five minutes. After I wake up I leave my house. It’s like a cog in the day scene. I do laundry, get coffee and eat dim sum with a friend. It all happens within my Chinatown. I go one block from my house to Dim Sum Go Go. I don’t really identify with the Western “let’s go to brunch,” you know, Americans: “Let’s eat a poached egg and avocado toast.”
COOKING WITH FRIENDS I’m pretty good friends with Danny Bowien, who is a chef at Mission Chinese Food. Right now we’re working on this collab. He’s inviting different friends to come and make a special menu with him. Mine’s in March. I want to concentrate the meal on two interests. They’re Thai based. One is fermenting raw seafood in fish sauce, lime and chili like crab roll or shrimp — things that have a gnarly colorful texture. I like things that feel a little eggy. Then I want to make a few different dishes with durian. It’s really extreme, either you love or hate this fruit.
LOCAL ART Sometimes I go and see three shows in the Chinatown/Lower East Side area. Maybe I’ll go meet someone at the Whitney. (I still believe in the Whitney as an institution. I want it to exist. It’s not like I want the Whitney to disappear; you shape the world through adjustments.) I stop by Essex Street gallery often. I always know someone showing at 47 Canal.
TAKE OUT AND TUNES I have a music producer named Aaron David Ross, who lives a block away from me. He has a studio in his house. He makes music for most of my videos and he’s doing sound for Performa too. I’ll go over around 7 or 8, we’ll order take out and then work on music until midnight.
I order take out a lot. I can’t cook complicated things because my apartment will just smell. I order Japanese or Thai food always. We work together on a project up until nighttime, and then maybe tune down by watching whatever is on TV, something like “Westworld,” “Succession” or “Euphoria.”
ZOMBIE STAGE I go home, brush my teeth, get in bed and look at my phone for like half an hour in zombie stage. Sometimes I’ll read random stuff; sometimes I’ll be scrolling through Instagram. If there’s already work coming in for Monday morning from Europe or Asia, I’ll sometimes answer those emails, but I won’t get on a laptop. Between 1 and 2, I’m turning off the lights. I need at least eight hours.
Sunday Routine readers can follow Korakrit Arunanondchai on Instagram @kritbangkok.
How These New Yorkers Spend Their Sundays
A Drag Performer and Educator: For Kelindah Schuster, who performs as Theydy Bedbug and helps people develop their own drag characters, Sundays are “a sacred day of rest.”
A Nigerian Cuisine Chef: Ayo Balogun, owner of the Dept of Culture restaurant in Brooklyn, devotes Sundays to pancakes with his 13-year-old son and art with his partner.
An ESPN Host: Mike Greenberg tries to avoid sports talk until it’s time to watch football. That leaves time for brunch, books and Taylor Swift.
Married Indie Pop Musicians: When they’re not on the road, Ian Devaney and Aidan Noell, two-thirds of the band Nation of Language, like to relax in the park and have coffee in their neighborhood.
An Urban Forager: Aly Stoffo knows where to find wild mushrooms, berries and other edible plants on Staten Island. But the location of her favorite paw paw patch is a secret.
The Central Park Birder: Christian Cooper, the host of the TV show “Extraordinary Birder,” enjoys a meditative moment, complete with lute music, among the native plants in his rooftop garden.
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