| Another
Expo: Beyond the Nation-State
Curated by Shinya Watanabe
Artists
included are: Marina Abramovic (Belgrade) / Genpei Akasegawa
(Tokyo) / Sejla Kameric (Sarajevo) / Ryoga Katsuma (Kochi) /
Ines Pais (Lisbon) / Jun Shibata (Kamakura) / Nebojsa Seric-Shoba
(Sarajevo) / Yuken Teruya (Okinawa)
Opening
Reception: August 15th 6-8pm (Memorial Day of the End of World
War II)
Exhibition: August 15th – September 10th
White Box is pleased to present Another Expo: Beyond the
Nation-State, curated by Shinya Watanabe. The exhibition
focuses on the concept of World’s Fairs (Expo) and underscores
the World’s Fairs’ relationship to the idea of Nation-State.
Another Expo is both a political and cultural project.
Instituted in 19th-century Europe, ‘Expo’ resulted
from the shift of city-states to Nation-States and from feudal
economies to market economies. With the formation of Nation-States,
the ‘Expo’ effectively shaped a country’s
national culture. ‘Expo’ became a powerful tool
for promoting versions of citizenship, social membership, and
cultural inclusion, as well as what can be characterized as
tourist consumerism and urban cosmopolitanism. Eventually however,
European modernism and the Nation-State structure led to colonialism
and World War. Furthermore, given the current international
climate the basis of the ‘Expo’ representing internationalism
is outdated and corrupted. Aichi “Love Earth” Expo
2005, currently on exhibit in Japan, has clearly given rise
to U.S. Unilateralism, thereby raising issues regarding the
meaning of an Expo and a Nation-State in the 21st -century.
Another Expo strives to transcend the idea of the established
‘Expo’ by rejecting violence and favoring co-existence.
There is no “outside” and “inside” and
no “foreign country.” There is no distinction between
enemy and ally. Instead, Another Expo aspires for an open system.
In this exhibition, curator Shinya Watanabe goes back to the
purist idea of an ‘Expo’, one that can explore art
related contexts and is free from promoting the Nation-State
institution.
The
eight artists chosen for the exhibition are an embodiment of
these ideals. They seek to define a new Expo by representing
the 21st-century as a time of coexistence, not war. The exhibition
opens to the public on Monday, August 15, the day Japan unconditionally
surrendered to World War II Allied forces. This year marks the
60th anniversary of Japan's defeat (as well as Hiroshima, August
6, and Nagasaki, August 9, which led to the end of WWII.) Every
year, the Japanese people observe August 15 by remembering their
war dead and renewing their vow for peace.
A Closing Reception will be held on Thursday, September 8, 6
– 8 pm
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