Review: Aichi Triennale 2013 “Awakening: Where Are We Standing? – Earth, Memory and Resurrection”

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Alfredo Jaar, Bringing Forth New Life / Umashimenkana (For Sadako Kurihara and the children of Ishinomaki), 2013. Black boards, video projection. Courtesy the artist and Aichi Triennale 2013. Photo: Fukuoka Sakae

Text by Miwa Kojima

The second edition of Aichi Triennale opened to the public on 10 August in the cities of Nagoya and Okazaki in Aichi prefecture, under the theme “Awakening: Where Are We Standing? – Earth, Memory and Resurrection”. 76 artists from over 25 countries are featured in various locations, spread across five different sites – Sakae; Shirakawa Park; Choja-Machi; Nayabashi (Nagoya) and Okazaki. As the title suggests, this event offers a range of reflections on the socio-political repercussions and the environmental impact of the Great East Japan Earthquake in March 2011. While artists in the triennale ponder on the catastrophic aftermath, Japan still faces a numbers of urgent issues – many Tsunami ravaged areas are still barely re-constructed; Tens of thousands of evacuees from the area around the Fukushima nuclear plant are still unable to go home; tons of highly contaminated radioactive water are still flowing into the Pacific from Fukushima nuclear plant, and the list goes on.
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Graham Ellard & Stephen Johnstone “Everything Made Bronze” at Satellite Gallery, Aichi University of the Arts, Nagoya

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Graham Ellard & Stephen Johnstone, Installation view “Everything Made Bronze”, 16mm film installation, Satellite Gallery, Nagoya, Japan. August 2013. Courtesy the artists.

Graham Ellard & Stephen Johnstone
Everything Made Bronze

9 – 19 August 2013
at Satellite Gallery,
Aichi University of the Arts, Nagoya
(Concurrent exhibition with the Aichi Triennale 2013)

Everything Made Bronze makes compelling use of one of the most renowned of architect Carlo Scarpa’s buildings, the Gipsoteca plaster-cast gallery in the Museo Canova, in Possagno, Northern Italy.

Shot using a static camera, the film follows the play of light in the Gipsoteca over a number of days as it produces a constantly fluid and changing environment for the appreciation of Canova’s plaster-casts and small-scale terracotta maquettes.
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