Press
Video Performance Artist Assumes Two Cultures
Gerard Lim, Asian Week
April 16, 1993
For Kip Fulbeck, the otherwise simple and mundane task of checking a
box designating his ethnicity poses a serious problem. Like other mixed-blood
Asian Pacific Americans--emphasis on Asian, or is it Pacific, or is it
American--Fulbeck must grapple with his identity of half-identities in
order to deliver an accurate, if not unsatisfying label of himself. He
is an American recipe made up of several ingredients, so to speak.
"Early on, I used to check 'white'," Says Fulbeck, whose mother
is of Cantonese descent and whose father has English, Irish, and Welsh
blood flowing through his veins. "That was because I grew up in a
white neighborhood, "he explains, "but then I started getting
beaten up almost every day by all these bibber white guys shouting, 'Eat
wood, Chinaman!' because I looked Chinese. That's just the half of it,
figuratively speaking. Then I started checking only Chinese after discovering
my roots," Fulbeck say s. "Now I check 'other,' and if they
ask me to explain, I write 'No'."
Born in the Southern California town of Fontana, Kip Fulbeck did much
of his growing up in Covina, an orange-farming community about 20 miles
from Disneyland and a "normal" white suburb. Now 27, he represents
an important segment of an up-and-coming, but previously voiceless generation
of Asian Pacific Americans hell-bent on making themselves seen, heard,
and experienced.
Well-qualified for life's adventures and armed with his bachelor's and
master's degresss in fine arts from UC San Diego, he is out on his appointed
mission: Fulbeck wants to get in your face and under your skin. And he
is one of only a handful of APAs wh o gets to do it regularly, if not
successfully.
After teaching in the Asian American studies program last year, Fulbeck
is currently a full-time associate professor at UC Santa Barbara in its
art studio department. But his claim to fame took several intriguing twists
and turns before reaching its curr ent state.
At one point, Fulbeck was blindly riding that infamous train running
on the model-minority track when he abruptly decided to derail. After
only one year as a pre-med student at UCLA, Fulbeck completely shifted
gears and took up art after talking to his b rother Dave Chen, who had
completed medical school and is currently a doctor. In retrospect, Fulbeck
could not have made a wiser decision.
"I asked [Dave] if there was anything he regretted about med school,
and he said, 'I never got to say I made this or did that,' and it just
stuck with me," says Fulbeck, who has since gone on to make several
videos and do a considerable amount of performa nce art.
Yes, We Have Some Bananas . . .
An almost representative, if not definitive piece of his entitled "banana
split" (all lowercase at his insistence), a sometimes biting, somewhat
cynical, and often hilarious video portrait of what it is to be half-white,
half-Chinese, and all screwed up. It serves as bitter testament (as is
the extended live-performance version "banana split & other mix-ups")
of an otherwise brilliant existence.
Like his fellow mixed-bloods, Fulbeck finds no reason to compromise on
cultural for the sake of the other(s), nor can he find any compelling
justification of why he would need to. To him, multicultural and multi-ethnic
means being able to draw from the b est--and the worst, if he so desires--of
both worlds. One gets the feeling that "ethnic cleansing" has
no place on his vocabulary.
"People should be proud of their heritage, and be able to speak
from it," Fulbeck says. "I remember this Vietnamese student
who was writing this poem, stuff like "I stand in bliss, to have
to have your kiss' because he thought he had to write lik e that -- it
ws just shit. He then started writing by incorporating mixed language
and it was fuckin' hot!"
Perhaps what Fulbeck was trying to say was that he saw the parallels
of that Vietnamese student's multi-lingual work in that of his own, but
getting the gist of his vernacularism should be rather, let's say, uncluttered.
Both artists employ ideas that are, as Fulbeck puts it, "really hybridized."
Fulbeck is "hapa" - mixed race Asian and white -- and he makes
no bones about it. "I constantly shift between two cultures ... but
I have no home base," he says. " I don't purposely try to [incorporate
culture and ethnicity] into my work; it just happen s," Fulbeck syas.
"[However], none of us can do work that's not cultural ... It's just
part of my life."
Kwai Chang Prof
If he has yet to smash your concept of a traditional university professor,
it might help to know that Fulbeck is a former nationaly ranked swimmer,
surfs frequently, takes up karate(he's up to a brown belt), works with
bonsai, loves Korean barbeque, and a vidly follows the Los Angeles Lakers
("Damn, they lost by a point yesterday'). due to clockwork engagements
in Santa Barbara, San Diego and Honolulu, frequent flyer Fulbeck rents
living space at all three sites.
In the meantime, he continues to be a one-man television wathdog committee.
The trash-TV phenomenon "Studs" has recently attracted Fulbeck's
wrath. He points toward the following unexplained omission: "They've
had no Asian men with white women; but they 've done the opposite."
Fulbeck also wonders about the reincarnation of the "Kung Fu"
series starring David Carradine, who is reprising his role as mixed blood
Kwai Chang Caine's grandson. "I can't believe the new one -- it's
so fuckin stupid! We're supposed to believe that he 's a hapa guy again
with a Chinese father and white mother?" he berates. "And another
thing, they're Shaolin monks! Who are they having sex with?"
This trend of "hapaness" notwithstanding, Fulbeck does have
some words of wisdom for those younger than himself. "Be honest to
yourself and your work," he says giggling. "Or does that sound
too much like Kwai Chang Caine?"
He is currently working on a performance/video project called "9
fish," which has led him to enlist his Chinese grandmother as an
important contributor. It touches on Confucian beliefs, learning to respect
the elderly and the controversial issue of euth anasia. "What is
doing the right thing now?" There weren't any people hooked up to
wires and tubes centuries ago," Fulbeck says.
It represents yet another new bridge for Kip Fulbeck to cross. But in
an indirect way, it's probably nothing he hasn't dealt with before. Is
he a visionary artist or a demon professor from Hades? Chances are, like
his heritage, there are two sides of the same coin.
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