
Aine Nakamura: hands on tape
Aine Nakamura’s hands on tape encompasses a year-long research project at The Lab, taking shape as an installation and series of performances throughout June and July. The work points to disparate subjects of the raw silk trade, the erased labor of both women and silkworms, and the metamorphosis of bodies and materials. Nakamura draws a connection between the city of San Francisco (“mulberry port,” as written with Chinese characters) and her maternal family’s city of Hachioji, Japan (“mulberry city”), shortly before her family’s historical home was sold and left the family. Drawing on her longstanding practice of embodied performance, Nakamura takes on the role of an oni, with a devil mask, as a guardian of her family’s historical home in Hachioji, with photographic documentation threaded through the installation, while further drawing connections between bodies and buildings—a process of healing and release.