Long-running rice installation comes to island

There are three large white squares placed diagonally across the floor, each with different amounts of rice piled on top of them. The first on the left has the most rice piled up, and it goes down in descending order. Above the first square are four rectangles in a line next to each other with similar amounts of rice on them. There are people gathered around either side of the displays, some talking to one another and others looking on at the pilesImage source, ArtHouse Jersey
Image caption,

The team behind the idea said each grain of rice was used to represent one person

  • Published

A long-running art installation that uses grains of rice to to represent statistics will come to Jersey for the first time.

ArtHouse Jersey will host the installation, called Of All the People in All the World, at Capital House from Wednesday.

Stan’s Cafe, a theatre company based in Birmingham, is behind the installation, which was first staged in 2003.

ArtHouse Jersey's head of programme James Tyson, said the show would make people "see the world in a startlingly different way".

The installation will see performers use rice to represent different human statistics, such as the populations of towns and cities, the number of people who are born or die each day and the number of deaths in the Holocaust.

Each grain of rice represents one person.

Mr Tyson said the exhibition, which runs until 6 October, would "remind us both of the fragility and precariousness of the world we live in, as well as those humble truths that connect us all as humans".

He added: "I'm intrigued both by what Stan's Cafe will reveal to us, as well as how our audiences inform the ever-changing experience of the exhibition."

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