AMNewYork took a peek behind Zarkana’s curtain recently, speaking with Erika Chen, Zarkana’s sand-painter.
In the first half of the show, spectators find serenity in the finger-painted sand designs of the Oracle – a character who communicates with the past and future using her hands.
“It is poetic … to slow down [the pace] of the show,” said Erika Chen, 28, who plays the Oracle. “It gives you a breather.”
Chen, an accomplished artist who also holds a degree in quantitative finance, picked up her sand-painting skill three years ago and debuted the routine last February. She said that her rare artistic talent helped land her a role in “Zarkana.”
“Sand painting,” Chen said, “is in demand.”
Chen, who left her homeland of China at 15 for school in Singapore, had to cope with solitude for years. She found refuge in the art room.
“I remember skipping lessons to go there,” she said. “And [I] would study physics and chemistry on my own.”
Chen added: “It was hard to adapt [to life] in a different country. So I would write songs and take art lessons at every school I went to.”
After living in Singapore and obtaining her finance degree there, Chen found work at Deutsche Bank and interned on Wall Street.
Even though she had innate artistic abilities, Chen said she initially pursued a finance career because it promised more financial stability.
“I am the only child. I am expected to take care of my parents when they retire,” she said.
But it turned out that art was her calling all along.
The site also spoke with Maria Choodu, Zarkana’s award-winning juggler. Read the rest of the original article to see her Q&A!
{ SOURCE: AM New York }