Angewandte
Interdisciplinary LabRamiro Wong is alumni of the department of TransArts and will work at AIL from
28 Mar till 25 Apr 2025. Ramiro opens his temporary studio and shares insights into the work progress.
Ramiro Wong’s artistic approach is interested in translation, representation and the politics of invisibilisation
as an integral part and narrative of installations and performances. Both in its temporal iteration and in its object-based
effects, Wong’s work is not intended to illustrate circumstances but to stimulate actions that lead to a conversation in which
participants witness each other’s experiences.
During the course of the AIL Artists in Residency Program,
Wong will explore the themes of survival and resilience through Sonnet: An Installation in 14 Parts. He will
begin by researching the Peruvian Internal Armed Conflict (1980—2000) and gathering materials such as repurposed lead-acid
car batteries to power lighting installations.
Experimentation will follow, as Wong tests different
light sources and soundscapes, constructing small-scale models and refining the technical aspects of the work. As the residency
progresses, he will assemble the final installation, integrating 14 pieces that narrate moments of endurance in broken systems.
Through adjustments and feedback, the project will take its final shape, inviting dialogue on the intersections of history
and contemporary struggles. The time at AIL will mark a crucial phase in the development of Sonnet, preparing
it for future exhibitions and expanded iterations.
Ramiro Wong (born in Lima, Peru in 1987) is a transdisciplinary
and research-based artist. His work addresses political and socio-cultural questions of identity construction. Local narratives
and individual experiences serve as the starting point for what he calls dynamics of displacement: a process in which identity
is formed, understood and deconstructed in different historical and geographical contexts. Wong’s current work explores how
these processes have been sustained by seemingly innocuous habits of consumption, reproduction and rebranding over the course
of a 500-year-old tradition that the artist calls Aesthetics of Othering.