“The Reason Why I Become a Hamster” is from Japanese performance artist Sako Kojima. The live art piece entailed her dressing up and living like a hamster. I mean really living like a hamster, in a human-sized hamster cage eating gigantic sunflower seeds and chewing on paper, wood and cardboard for a whole week.
The aim was to “show us how our souls suffer from the incarceration of our civilised modern society.”
I think the photos of this surprisingly sexy-looking human hamster are brilliant! I just LOVE the pictures.
Be sure to check out the genius related articles, especially the criminal hamster post in the articles below!
What's Driving This Trend
- Performance Art
- There is an opportunity for performance artists to push boundaries and explore new forms of expression, such as living like a hamster in a human-sized cage.
- Physical Challenges
- Living in a cage and eating like a hamster for a week showcases the human body's resilience to physical challenges, creating opportunities for endurance challenges or physical feats in the sports industry.
- Societal Critique
- Artists can use their performance to critique societal norms and restrictions by embodying and exposing the discomfort of confinement or following the expected modes of behavior.
Who This Affects Most
- Art
- The art industry has opportunities to embrace new forms of expression and questioning the expectations of conventional creativity and artistic freedom.
- Fitness & Wellness
- The fitness and wellness industry can offer unique physical challenges inspired by the experimentation in performance art, promoting human resilience and promoting fitness achievements.
- Psychology & Sociology
- The concept of human hamsters highlights the relationship between confinement and societal expectations, providing avenues for study and reflection by experts in sociology and psychology.
