Lee Mingwei


Lee Mingwei is a Taiwanese-American contemporary artist currently living and working in Paris, France and New York, USA. Lee Mingwei creates participatory installations, where strangers can explore issues of trust, intimacy, and self-awareness, and one-on-one events, where visitors contemplate these issues with the artist through eating, sleeping, walking and conversation. Lee's projects are often open-ended scenarios for everyday interaction, and take on different forms with the involvement of participants and change during the course of an exhibition. His work has been exhibited in museums worldwide including The Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City, Mori Art Museum in Tokyo, and Centre Pompidou in Paris, among others.
Lee's mid-career survey exhibition "Lee Mingwei and His Relations" was conceived by the Mori Art Museum, and traveled to Taipei Fine Arts Museum and Auckland Art Gallery Toi o Tāmaki, with a European survey exhibition "Lee Mingwei: Li, Gifts and Rituals" at Gropius Bau in 2020.
He has participated at "Viva Arte Viva," The 57th International Art Exhibition - La Biennale di Venezia, curated by Christine Macel, and has been featured in biennials in Venice, Lyon, Liverpool, Taipei, Sydney, Whitney, and Asia Pacific Triennials.

Education

Lee studied at California College of Arts, earning a BFA in Textiles in 1993. During his time in university he was particularly influenced by two professors, Mark Thompson and Suzanne Lucy, who expanded his understanding of art. Following his undergraduate studies, Lee continued on to Yale University where he earned an MFA in sculpture in 1997.

Work

Lee’s work focuses on the formation and contemplation of human relationships. His pieces typically involve situations that invite participants to reflect upon on their connections with others, or prompt them to create new connections with strangers. His work is often linked to Relational Aesthetics, a term coined by French art critic Nicolas Bourriaud to denote art that creates situations or environments that invite viewer engagement. Curators and writers have also contextualized such themes within Lee’s work by referencing American artists Allan Kaprow and John Cage, who created work dealing with an audience’s relationship to its environment. For his survey exhibitions, Mami Kataoka further proposes an Eastern context of connection and interconnectivity in association with Lee’s work.

The Sleeping Project and The Dining Project

Lee’s work also focuses on daily life, and involves staging everyday activities such as sleeping and eating within the museum space. For The Sleeping Project Lee or a host from the museum stages the act of "sleeping with" by placing two beds and several nightstands within the museum. For each of the days, museum visitors are selected through lottery to spend a night in the museum sleeping in one of two beds alongside with their host. Participants are asked to bring objects from the space where they usually sleep, and the following morning they are to leave the objects on one of the surrounding nightstands. The objects remain on the nightstands for the duration of the exhibition. Later iterations of the piece have involved two strangers sleeping in the beds, rather than Lee. In a similar work, The Dining Project, Lee or a host from the museum cooks and serves a visitor a meal that they then share together within the museum.

100 Days with Lily and The Letter Writing Project

Many of his works draw from childhood experiences and memories of his family. For 100 Days with Lily Lee draws from his time mourning the loss of his grandmother by chronicling his experience spending 100 days with a narcissus from planting, to its growth, and eventually to its death and his mourning of the flower. He documents this experience in a series of photographs, onto which he superimposes lines of text marking one moment from each of the hundred days with the flower. The passing of his grandmother also inspired The Letter Writing Project in which participants write letters to someone expressing something they wish they had expressed before. Participants leave their letters within wooden booths Lee created for participants to write inside. If the participants mark the recipient’s address, the museum mails out the letters, and retains the ones without addresses.

The concept of Gift

Lee also explores the concept of the gift in his work, drawing particular inspiration from Lewis Hyde’s book The Gift: Creativity and the Artist in the Modern World. In 2009, for La Biennale de Lyon, Lee created The Moving Garden, a piece consisting of a granite slab from which visitors may take flowers. The visitors are then meant to bring the flower out of the museum, diverge from the path they would normally take, and along the way give the flower to a stranger.
In The Mending Project, a mender is seated at a long table with two chairs against a wall of colorful spools of thread. Participants are invited to bring in something they would like to have mended or embellished, while they sit across from the mender and talk. After the mending, the visitors can then choose to take away their garment, or leave it at the gallery so that it may be attached to the spools on the wall, and return to collect it at the conclusion of the exhibition.
In Sonic Blossom, participants are gifted a song. Classical singers approach a single museum-goer and ask if they would like to receive a gift. If the participant agrees, the singer leads them to a seat and begins to perform one of Franz Schubert’s Lieder. Lee was inspired to create the piece while helping his mother to recover from surgery, during which time the two would listen to Schubert’s Lieder. The presentation of Sonic Blossom at The Metropolitan Museum of Art was selected as “The Best Classical Music of 2015” and “The Best in Art of 2015” in the New York Times.

Retrospectives

Lee Mingwei and His Relations

In 2014, the Mori Art Museum held a retrospective of Lee’s work titled "Lee Mingwei and His Relations: The Art of Participation." The show was curated by Mami Kataoka, Mori’s Chief Curator, and included a survey of Lee’s work spanning 20 years, as well as work by other artists such as Yves Klein, John Cage, Allan Kaprow, and Rirkrit Tiravanija to contextualize Lee’s practice.
Kataoka highlighted the relevance of Lee’s work in light of the 2011 Tōhoku earthquake and tsunami as well as the importance of holding such an exhibition in Japan:
“In Japan today, with all of its loss, Lee Mingwei’s efforts have released similarly positive  energy towards rebuilding relationally and bringing connectedness into our awareness. While they also mean embracing an awareness of loss, the special experiences Lee creates call strongly on our senses and emotions and help us take our first steps toward becoming conscious of new relationality.”
Following its run in the Mori Art Museum, in 2015 Lee’s retrospective traveled to the Taipei Fine Arts Museum, and subsequently to the Auckland Art Gallery Toi o Tāmaki in 2016.

Selected solo exhibitions