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Thailand Biennale, Korat 2021

Bienal de arte / Varios espacios de Tailandia / Varios espacios en el Mueang Nakhon Ratchasima District y en el Phi Mai District / Bangkok, Krung Thep, Tailandia
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Cuándo:
18 dic de 2021 - 31 mar de 2022

Inauguración:
18 dic de 2021

Comisariada por:
Seiha Kurosawa, Tawatchai Somkong, Vipash Purichanont, Yuko Hasegawa

Organizada por:
Office of Contemporary Art and Culture, Ministry of Culture (OCAC)

Artistas participantes:
Eli Sudbrack & Christopher Hamaide-Pierson - Assumed Vivid Astro Focus - AVAF, Federico Herrero, Maxwell Alexandre, Sandra Cinto

       


Descripción de la Exposición

Thailand Biennale, Korat 2021, titled Butterflies Frolicking on the Mud: Engendering Sensible Capital, is underway for the coming opening this December. Facing the ongoing global pandemic, it is still unclear if most international participant artists can conduct a site visit. Within this circumstance, the Biennale would like to introduce the challenging preparation process through a note by one of the co-curators, Seiha Kurosawa, the youngest Japanese curator in the curatorial team, working remotely. At the end of 2019, I was invited to be a co-curator for the Thailand Biennale Korat 2020 (now 2021). In January 2020, I visited Nakhon Ratchasima Province for the first time to inspect various potential venues for the Biennale. At that time, global tensions were rising due to reports of a coronavirus outbreak in Wuhan, however, I did not imagine that this virus would lead to the global pandemic that we know today, and I remember that I was slightly optimistic about it. In retrospect, this first site visit was almost the last opportunity for me to travel abroad since then. In this note, I intend to focus and emphasize the process of this particular Biennale in that all of the local and international members are forced to work from a distance. During the initial site visit, the curatorial team raised as a central theme of the Biennale a question of a new form of capital that transcends the division between human and nonhuman, underpinned by the latest environmental and ecological views and how this can be engendered within local cultural resources. However, although the central premise of the Biennale was to commission site-specific works for artists, it became almost impossible for international artists to visit the sites, as well as foreign curators, and thus we were forced to make a significant change in direction. Not only outside of the country but within Thailand, as travel between cities, was restricted by the lockdown, I had to look at the changing situation remotely and continue to feel ambivalent about it intensely. Moreover, it was expected for the curatorial team, under the leadership of Yuko Hasegawa, to couch the local staff who did have substantial experience fabricating contemporary artworks when we began the preparation with the emerging pandemic. It was also a challenge for the Biennale because the candidate venues in Nakhon Ratchasima Province did not provide general art museum facilities. The Thailand Biennale aims to be a nomadic biennale, changing the host city each time; this is only the second edition. Thus, the curatorial team and the organizer team have been closely engaged with this mission through remote communications. Amid this, local news reported that the Covid-19 pandemic had caused many butterflies to arise due to the reduction in human migration in the region. This event revealed that the current human boundary did not apply to all the entities on Earth. Reinspired by this event, the concept of this Biennale was rebuilt to capture the new form of capital through the metaphor of butterflies nourishing and resting on the mud. As the butterflies can easily fly beyond our entrenched notion of the physical borders and relax on the mud, the Biennale will transcend the on-site and off-site division and slowly engender opportunities for detoxification, connecting, and mutually healing people and the other natural, social, and cultural entities. Like many other biennales, this Biennale has inevitably been forced halfway through the stress of “rushing,” but unlike global capital that pursues only completion and success, it will present the possibility of art that slows down the process, is not rushed, and slowly fosters each other. Seiha Kurosawa


Entrada actualizada el el 20 dic de 2021

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