Aki Onda is an interdisciplinary artist, composer, and curator based in New York. Born and raised in Japan but with an artistic practice that spans the globe, he has explored diverse mediums, from collages to collaborations with musicians and film artists to cassette tape recordings, pushing the boundaries of genre and experience.
For this piece, he collaborated with filmmaker Moko Fukuyama and sound designer Daniel Neumann to create a “metaphor or poetic response to the unprecedented times.” Shot at Hurricane Point, a small island formed from Hurricane Sandy debris, it effortlessly captures the repetitive, seemingly empty actions that fill our days in quarantine – and offers a powerful statement of strength.
Wearing a t-shirt, shorts, disposable plastic gloves, and (hopefully) waterproof shoes, Aki Onda stands amidst crashing waves. He selects a rock, places the rock atop another. Adjusts it. Then lifts up a further rock. Places it. Moves on. This action, while plain and obvious in writing, is surprisingly mesmerizing; it’s calming and hypnotic, creating a clean mental space.
The video takes breaks for some pensive shots of geese, seafoam, and dripping kelp. And then keeps returning to this cathartic action. Two hands, one finger peeking out of the now-torn glove. Stacking rock after rock after rock.
The human is seemingly in control, carefully selecting and balancing each rock. But the process is bigger than one individual. Onda can’t control the laws of gravity, or the encroaching waves, any more than we can release the all-encompassing grip this pandemic has over our lives.
Yet Onda goes on. Despite the rocks falling, despite not actually being able to affect a long-lasting change in this ocean environment, despite being one tiny being in a world racked by a pandemic that changes everything, Onda keeps placing rock after rock.
In the end, after holding our collective breaths with every single placement, we’re left with a couple-seconds-long shot of the final creation. And it’s a dramatic, pivotal moment.
Framed by the imposing Brooklyn skyline and a lonely ferry in the distance, we discover six perfectly-balanced rock formations, standing proud. Instead of watching Onda stack one tower over and over and over, he has actually been building many all along.
A giant health crisis wracks the entire planet and yet Onda continues creating art, producing a wonderful statement about struggle and elegant resilience. It’s the meditation we all need.
Artist Statement
Stack Until It Falls Down was composed by Aki Onda in May 2020 during the lockdown of the COVID-19 crisis. The Fluxus-type score instructs a simple gesture and its repetition. The action of stacking, reflected in the video, suggests activity in our lives or maybe life itself. It’s a recurring cycle that culminates in a potentially unfortunate fate. Stack Until It Falls Down was shot at Hurricane Point – a little known place along the Brooklyn shore of the East River. As one of a few places along the river where two currents meet, Hurricane Point developed as a small island made out of the drifted debris from Hurricane Sandy. This location communicates with the harsh reality of life, and Onda’s simple gesture becomes a metaphor or poetic response to the unprecedented times. The video was made with Brooklyn-based artist and filmmaker Moko Fukuyama and sound designer Daniel Neumann.
Aki Onda
Stack Until It Falls Down
2020
Composed and performed by Aki Onda
Video by Moko Fukuyama
Sound by Daniel Neumann
Commissioned by the Portland Institute for Contemporary Art (PICA)
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