Friday, July 1, 2011

"ATOM SUIT PROJECT: ANTENNA OF THE EARTH" Kenji YONOBE Solo Exhibition

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The upcoming show at the Yamamoto Gendai gallery follows suit of ChimPom's response to the nuclear disaster at the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant (see previous posting). What follows is the gallery's press-release.

Atom Suit Project: Antenna of the Earth is an installation of a life-size figure of the artist himself in a radiation detecting Atom Suit equipped with Geiger counters, appropriating the well-known statue of Kuuya Shounin, a monk chanting a sutra which is represented by the miniature images of Buddha coming out of his mouth.

Yanobe created this piece based on the experiences from his visit to Chernobyl in 1997, which delivers the strong will of the artist to become like an "antenna" of diverse occurrences of the world after the crisis. Prior to this project, the artist created the radiation protective Yellow Suit in response to the threat of the Mihama nuclear power plant accident in 1991. Ever since Geiger counters have become essential elements in his works.

For 20 years up until now, Yanobe has been concerned with powers and phenomena which are out of human control, not limited to nuclear powers and radioactivity, and engaged in the themes of Survival/Revival.

After 10 years since its creation, we believe that the significance of Antenna of the Earth is ever more broadening.We hope this exhibition will be an opportunity to examine the practice of Kenji Yanobe and to introduce new perspectives on the reality in which we are living now.

The show opens this Saturday, July 2, reception is 18:00–20:00.

Chim↑Pom on Fukushima: "Real Times"

This posting is long overdue since the related exhibition took place over one months ago, in late May, but I left Tokyo three days after the earthquake, one day after I learned about the radiation leak, and in the time that followed I never got a chance to write about this remarkable show.

At the base of what became the Real Times exhibition is the collective's visit to the stricken nuclear plant—the daredevils embarked on their trip, as volunteers, when the rest of the traffic around the reactors was outbound. 

ChimPom returned to Tokyo with a collection of videos and a resolve to show the significance of the events in the north.  The infamous "Shibuya mural" episode was reported in the BBC, although without naming the group. In a move that would make Banksy himself look tame, the ChimPom amended (or defaced, depending on one's point of view) the giant Taro Okamoto mural located in the middle of Shibuya Station. The well-known eerie representation of Hiroshima and Nagasaki bombings was given an "update" of nuclear dangers with a pasted image embedding the crippled plant into the mural. Needless to say Tokyo police did not allow the update to stay up for long. Here is the video of the "updated" mural, the ChimPom addition is at the lower right, next to the escalators:

Following this, the Mujin-to Productions, ChimPom's managing gallery, produced an unusual show that lasted only five days (May 20th through 25), but was was attended by over 3000(!) people. My friends who stayed in Tokyo and attended the show unanimously hailed it as one of the best they have seen. 


To be fair, ChimPom were not the only artist group to engage the Fukushima disaster, the New-Methodists, another collective consisting of Takahiro Hirama, Shogo Baba and Hideki Nakazawa also applied for a disaster volunteer program, but they made a point of doing it in a capacity of citizens, not artists. Still, given the attention garnered by Real Times and the immediacy of the artists' response it might find a place in history as a real-time creative hallmark.