WASTELANDERS ARTIST COLLECTIVE
Wastelanders Artist Collective is a group of international artists who together make collaborative site-specific installations related to the theme of “waste.” We met while MA Fine Art students at Chelsea College of Arts (UAL) in London, UK. Previous installation topics of our collective include fake recycling, coral bleaching, sensationalism in urban life, contemporary spirituality, the destructiveness of progress in modern society, and other environmental issues.
INSTALLATIONS
WASTELAND 1.0
Filet Art Project Space London, UK
Ka Ian Hoi, Rita Castanheira, Yao Yao Yu, Lelia Byron, Pui Pui Ip, Xiaojing Li
WASTETANK
Centro Comercial Cedofeita, Porto, Portugal
Ka Ian Hoi, Lelia Byron, Pui Pui Ip, Rita Castanheira
WASTELAND 2.0
FAKE RECYCLING
hARTslane Gallery
London, UK
Ka Ian Hoi, Lelia Byron, Pui Pui Ip, Rita Castanheira

























TEXT ABOUT WASTELAND 2.0
WRITTEN BY ISABEL PESTANA
In a special collaboratIon with hARTslane, this exhibitIon brings together four artIsts from the
MA Fine Art programme at Chelsea College of Art to explore the meaning of recycling.
Wasteland 2.0 is a visual reflectIon of the struggle the consumer faces once a product — in this
case a plastIc bag — is used and later discarded in the hopes of turning into something else.
The site-specific work represents a spiral of used plastIc bags sewn together. They hang from the
ceiling all the way to the ground, creatIng a circular corridor that leads to a dead-end. Along this
path the visitor noIces the variety of plastIc bags that were collected from several countries by
the artIsts, revealing the global implicatIon of recycling malpractIces. Unlike the ideal narratIve
of the recycling process, this spiral becomes an extension of the nonlinear mechanisms involved
in the actual processes of recycling. Most of the products designated onto recycling plants do
not undergo the process of becoming new products, rather are left to accumulate into piles of
waste.
Along the way, reduce, reuse, recycle, became only the latter, conferring to the consumer the
responsibility of tackling the problem of waste through recycling — even though the
infrastructure to process these products did not evolve parallel to the amount of waste
produced — while alleviatIng corporaIons from reducing their productIon.
Ka Ian Hoi, Lelia Byron, Rita Castanheira, and Pui Pui Ip, who explore different media in their
individual practIces, came together to examine the noIon of waste after having witnessed the
amount of trash produced every year while in art school. Unlike other subjects, the waste
produced from art practIces is made visible through the awareness of students towards their
need for new materials, and their commitment to the idea that new materials may result in
better work. The artists also drew inspiratIon from the quilt, as developed in the work of the
artist Faith Ringgold, as a symbol for comfort. In a way, the patchwork produced by the
assemblage of the plastIc bags can be understood in parallel to the image of the quilt, and the
comfort the quilt generates can be equated to the pleasure of buying into something, in this
case, the pleasure obtained from the idea that recycling puts the consumer in the right place.
This exhibitIon also plays with the definitIon of circle as presented by a Coca Cola ad from last
month, and reveals how little the approach towards recycling has changed over the past 60
years. The task of reducing pollutIon was first attributed to the consumer in 1953 with the
lobbying group Keep America BeautIful, a group founded by Pepsi and Coke and Phillip Morris,
whose slogan was “People Start PollutIon, People can Stop it.” The Coca Cola video ad from
September 2019 “PlastIc round in circles,” shows a line that quickly shifts into a curved line,
giving back the consumer the job of recycling plastIc bottles. As the ad claims, “they are easier
to recycle and turn into new ones again.”
Wasteland 2.0 is the third installment of a series of exhibitIons about waste that have been
taking place since April 2019, the first one entItled Wasteland at Filet in London, and the second
Wastetank at Centro Comercial de Cedofeita in Porto, Portugal. The current exhibitIon is an
invitation to debate what happens to products when we dispose of them, as well as a reminder
of the scale of the recycling problem.
