Anida Yoeu Ali is a Cambodian-American artist. Her works include span performance, art installation, videos, and images. Installation art is an artistic genre of three-dimensional works that often are site-specific and designed to transform the perception of a space.
Early life and education
Anida Yoeu Ali is a Muslim-Khmer woman. She was born in 1974 in Battambang, the capital city in north western Cambodia, and soon after her family fled the war after Vietnam invaded. Her family stayed in a refugee camp in Thailand starting in 1979, then moved to Malaysia to stay with family before finally coming to the United States. She grew up in Chicago and then moved to Phnom Penh in 2011. Ali first obtained her bachelor's degree in Fine Arts at the University of Illinois in 1996. In 2010, she finished her master's degree of Fine Arts at the Art Institute of Chicago. She also has a B.F.A in Graphic Design from the University of Illinois Urbana- Champaign.
Anida Yoeu Ali's work The Buddhist Bug, Into the Night and her earlier works, including "The Old Cinema", extends from her Buddhist Bug series of photographs, videos and live performances. In these works, the artist playfully inhabits a sinuous, caterpillar-like costume whose color references the robes of Buddhist monks, in which the bug is also not given a specific gender to be "hybrid in nature". Ali's bug was inspired by her fascination with Buddhism and the exploration of diasporicidentities. The project developed when Ali returned to her birthplace of Cambodia as a means of inhabiting and recording Cambodia's changing rural and metropolitan landscapes, and of negotiating her culturally mixed background. The series depicts an art deco cinema, Golden Temple, to make reference to what was known as the "Golden Era" of Cambodian Cinema, a period which the younger generation looks back on fondly and is depicted as so in the series, in which the Buddhist Bug tries to find identity and "otherness". The bug finds instead an emptiness, a "loss in a glorious past", and finally a shadow of him/herself. In a series of social encounters in locations around Phnom Penh, Ali's bug impassively occupies central stage among communities, schools, cinemas, restaurants, bars, and urban and rural landscapes undergoing rapid change and development, in order to challenge religious intolerance, difference in others, and a globalizing world. Ali has worked with filmmakers to create "1700% Project: Mistaken for Muslim" to address an increase in violence toward the Muslim community after the 9/11 terrorist attack.
Awards
In 2015, Anida Yoeu Ali won the Sovereign Asian Prize in Hong Kong. The was launched in 2004 and aims at encouraging Asian promising artists while acting as a fundraiser for charities. Her winning piece is called Spiral Alley - a photographic print from The Buddhist Bug. Ali was also the $20,000 grand prize recipient in the Millennium Park music festival's online video contest, with her work titled, "1700% Project: Mistaken for Muslim". Worked on with her husband, a Japanese video producer named Masahiro Sugana, the video depicts a poet, dancer, angel, and prisoner speaking out against anti-Muslim hate crimes. This is also reinforced with images of hate crimes taking place, to show the disturbing nature of such discourse.