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Why do we demonise work? Korean artist Haegue Yang defies convention

Passion for work has become taboo, says award-winner known for her pieces featuring Venetian blinds. It’s time to defy convention and blur the lines between our jobs and private lives

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South Korean artist Haegue Yang poses under her installation Lingering Nous at the Centre Pompidou. The monumental artwork is an assembly of colourful Venetian blinds. Photo: AFP

Haegue Yang has a rather unconventional idea of how to spend her private time. She wants to lock herself and a couple of friends in a room and fast for a day or two, surviving only on water.

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“We would be just lying around and slowly feeling weaker,” says the award-winning Korean artist. “We would be sharing an experience, focusing on being together and not getting distracted from it, without an expensive hotel, wine or food. What would happen between us? It is an intimate experiment.

“For example when I’m in New York, people always think about which restaurants to go to, ordering food and drinks, or where to go. These are overwhelming topics, and people do not realise they are more overwhelming than going to work. They are interference. All these rituals are disturbances and do not take ‘getting together’ seriously.”

Yang hasn’t put her idea to the test yet. Finding the time and friends daring enough to take part have both proved difficult.

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