Artist Stranded at Sea During Container Ship Residency
"I am still making work," says the artist.
artnet News | September 8, 2016
When British artist Rebecca Moss boarded the Hanjin Geneva, bound from Vancouver for Shanghai, on August 24, she had no way of knowing what would happen next.
The Hanjin Shipping Company, the Seoul-based company operating the ship (which has actually been rented from an American company, the Conti Group, and flies under a German flag), filed for bankruptcy on August 31. Suddenly, the Geneva, and everyone aboard, found itself barred from entry from ports around the world, due to concerns that the company would not be able to pay port and service fees.
Over a week later, the Hanjin Geneva container ship is currently anchored about 13 miles off the coast of Japan, and is hoping to eventually make port in Tokyo. This strange turn of events has left the crew, and with them, Moss, in limbo.
More...
sfchronicle.com...Hanjin ships are currently docked offshore, effectively marooned...The concern is that Hanjin won’t be able to pay port fees or crew wages--- and that the contents of the ships might be seized by creditors upon entry to port. One captain near Japan was given permission to unload cargo, but his request for food and water was denied...continues...
Artist Residency on a Container Ship
artnet News | Sept. 2015
Container Artist Residency program...Artists will “voyage into the heart of international commerce” ... the project forms a critique that cuts two ways. The global economy is now the backdrop for all artistic production...
blah, blah, blah
...Artists get to spend up to three weeks on board a container ship, where their studio will be a private cabin measuring 12 square meters (about 12 by 10 feet). They’ll receive a $1,000 honorarium and an allowance for travel home; stipends of up to $5,000 are also available to pay for equipment and materials...[i]more blah, blah, blah...
Hanjin’s bankruptcy has its cargo ships unable to dock. Is global shipping melting down?
slate.com | Sept. 8, 2016
..An estimated 25 percent of the world’s container capacity sit empty.
The Hanjin situation also raises the question of whether more companies will follow. Baker says a cascade effect from the bankruptcy is likely but that it certainly isn’t the only company in trouble. "The next big issue is Japan," says Baker. "They have too many shipping companies for their own good and far more than needed."
More...