The Malaysian artist created an installation called "Teh Tarik Man" out of 20,000 teabags for the World Economic Forum in Davos last month. She says it took about two months to build the 10-foot by 7-foot piece, which ended up weighing more than 440 pounds.
Hong Yi stained the teabags in 10 different shades of brown, a variation she achieved by steeping them in an assortment of water temperatures for different amounts of time. She added brown food dye for the darkest tones.
"I wanted to create a piece that reflected an everyday scene in Malaysia that reminds me of home," Hong Yi explained in her YouTube description. "Teh Tarik (which means 'pulled-tea' in Malay) is a drink served in local coffee shops (or kopitiams) that is sweet, frothy and milky, and is frothed up when tea is poured between two containers."
"Perhaps more important than the drink itself is the underlying culture. Locals gather in kopitiams and mamaks, and here they talk about where to buy the best durians, the traffic, politics, weather, soccer... It is a drink that brings people together and I hope that I get to share a bit of my country through this piece!"
If Hong Yi's art looks familiar, there's a reason: She's also made a portrait of Jackie Chan out of 64,000 chopsticks, and created another work out of 750 pairs of socks.
You could say she had this in the bag.
H/T Digg
Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2015/02/05/tea-bag-portrait-art-red-hong-yi_n_6622180.html?utm_hp_ref=weird-news&ir=Weird+News and provided by entertainment-movie-news.com
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