.
Into the Atomic Sunshine - Post-War Art under Japanese Peace Constitution 
Article 9
http://spikyart.org/atomicsunshine/index.html

Curator: Shinya Watanabe

Venue: Puffin Room
435 Broome St
New York, NY 10013
+1-212-343-2881

Saturday, January 12, 2008 - Sunday, February 10, 2008
Opening Reception: Saturday, January 12th 6-8PM

Vanessa Albury, Allora & Calzadilla, Kota Ezawa, Eric van Hove, Yutaka 
Matsuzawa, Yasumasa Morimura
Nobuyuki Ohura, Yoko Ono, Motoyuki Shitamichi, Yuken Teruya, Yukinori Yanagi

Special Event:
Saturday, Jan 19, 5PM- (Free)
Documentary Film Screening "White Light, Black Rain"
Steven Okazaki on the Atomic Bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki
+ Butoh Performance by Vangeline Theater Co.

Friday, Jan 25, 7PM-
Acoustic Live Music Performance
Miho Hatori (former Cibo Matto Member, Noodle of Gorillaz) + Special Guest

--

"We have been enjoying your atomic sunshine." - General Courtney Whitney of 
GHQ, February 13, 1946


The Constitution of Japan was essentially written by US army officials from 
General Headquarters (GHQ) in 1947. Parts of "Article 9," known as the Peace 
Constitution, renounce war and the maintaining of potentially belligerent 
forces as the sovereign right of the nation.

ARTICLE 9. Aspiring sincerely to an international peace based on justice and 
order, the Japanese people forever renounce war as a sovereign right of the 
nation and the threat or use of force as means of settling international 
disputes. In order to accomplish the aim of the preceding paragraph, land, sea, 
and air forces, as well as other war potential, will never be maintained. The 
right of belligerency of the state will not be recognized.

This unique provision in the peace clause of the Constitution, unlike any seen 
elsewhere before or since, reflects the idealism of American New Dealers. The 
new Constitution was well received by the Japanese people, who had experienced 
the bitterness of war; and it has not been altered for 60 years. But now, faced 
with political instability in Asia and an upsurge of nationalism, its very 
existence is being questioned.

In a climate in which the Constitution is faced with the possibility of being 
revised, the art exhibition "Into the Atomic Sunshine - Post-War Art under 
Japanese Peace Constitution Article 9" attempts to highlight issues and raise 
awareness of the influence of the Peace Constitution, which played such an 
important role in shaping post-war Japan and has had such an enormous impact on 
the Japanese people, and the reaction of post-war Japanese art to it.

Article 9 played a large role in allowing Japan to recover from war and helped 
reshape the country. Japan has avoided direct confrontation with other 
countries for more than 60 years. Although Article 9 has kept Japan from direct 
involvement in wars, its indirect involvement in wars has meant that Article 9 
has helped maintain a twisted status quo. This unique situation has given 
artists the opportunity to discover a theme to tackle and express in their 
works. Numerous artists tried to deal with difficulties such as post-war 
problems and identity issues; these works are also related to the connection 
between Article 9 and world peace.

Despite the uniqueness of Article 9, its very existence is, surprisingly, not 
well known in other countries. Through this exhibition, not only will post-war 
Japanese and non-Japanese art be introduced, but Article 9 of the Japanese 
Constitution will also be made more familiar to audiences outside Japan.

Named after the "Atomic Sunshine" Conference between the U.S. occupation 
administration and Japan representatives which created the Constitution of 
Japan, this exhibition will investigate the historic significance of Article 9 
and the importance of its development, and the fact that there has been no 
Japanese blood shed as a result of direct military confrontation for 60 years 
after the end of World War II.

Curator’s Statement:
"The Breakaway from the Century of War - Article 9 as the Overcoming of 
European Modernism"
http://spikyart.org/atomicsunshine/article9textbyshinya.html

Catalogue: Into the Atomic Sunshine - Post-War Art under Japanese Peace 
Constitution Article 9
68 pages, A4 Size, full color catalogue is available: $20 
ISBN#:978-1-60461-966-9
also available on Amazon.com
http://www.amazon.com/Into-Atomic-Sunshine-Post-War-Constitution/dp/160461966X/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1199493236&sr=8-1

Yuken Teruya's Art Work "Upside Down Hinomaru" is available. For more 
information, please contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]


Media Contact:
[EMAIL PROTECTED]


The exhibition sponsored by The Kao Foundation for Arts and Sciences, Asahi 
Newspaper Cultural Foundation and the Puffin Foundation.
Media Partner: ART iT, GENERATION TIMES
Supported by Daneyal Mahmood Gallery
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