Showing posts with label art and photography. Show all posts
Showing posts with label art and photography. Show all posts

Wednesday, December 6, 2017

If You Love This Planet


If You Love This Planet - YouTube
If You Love This Planet
International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons (ICAN)
Published on Dec 5, 2017
A beautifully animated short film, If You Love This Planet brings to life Hiroshima survivor Setsuko Thurlow’s passionate call to action, on the day that the Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons was adopted at the United Nations – 7 July 2017.


International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons (ICAN)
Facebook 

Saturday, September 21, 2013

9.26-29 MUNICH: Uranium Film Festival | @URANIUMFESTIVAL




SEPTEMBER 26TH TO 29TH, 2013

Program - download PDF

Festival-Flyer - download

Festival-Poster - download

Filmtheatres:


Rio Filmpalast

Rosenheimer Straße 46
81669 München
Tel: 089 48 69 79
www.riopalast.de


Werkstattkino

Fraunhoferstr. 9
80469 München
Tel: 089-2607250
www.werkstattkino.de
Admission
Rio Filmpalast:
Normal price: 8,50 €
Pupils / students / pensioners: 6, - €
Werkstattkino:
5, - € for all

Uranium Film Festival Munich 26 - 29 September 2013 | uraniumfilmfestival.org



ABOUT US

Art and Awareness

Art and Awareness: The International Uranium Film festival was founded in 2011 in Santa Teresa, the famous artist quarter in the heart of Rio de Janeiro. The aim of the festival is to inform the public, from a neutral position, about nuclear power, uranium mining, nuclear weapons and the health effects of radioactivity. The horror of atomic bombs and those who suffered from them, and nuclear accidents like Chernobyl or Fukushima should never be forgotten - nor repeated. The correlation between nuclear energy and weapons must be openly discussed. The festival inspires discourse about the health and environmental risks of radioactive materials and waste. We seek to educate and activate the public on these issues. The dynamic media of film is an important tool to bring that information to a diverse international public.
Since its inception, the Uranium Film Festival has enhanced public awareness of new productions of independent documentaries and movies about the nuclear fuel chain and radioactive issues. The nuclear world has produced over 200,000 metric tons of high-level radioactive waste during the past sixty years. This waste will remain hazardous for 100,000 years - yet there are no viable solutions for its safe, permanent disposal. It is our responsibility to inform societies and future generations about the dangers of radioactivity. We believe that public education and open discussion of these dangers will lead to a more peaceful, healthy future. Filmmaking and the Uranium Film Festival are tools to inform future generations - and to promote a safe, sustainable future without nuclear risks.
After premiering in Rio de Janeiro, the Festival travels to other major cities in Brazil and other countries. In past years it has traveled to São Paulo, Recife, Salvador, Fortaleza and to Lisbon and Porto in Portugal, to Berlin in Germany, and to ten major cities in India including New Delhi, Hyderabad and Mumbai. The legal organizer of the Uranium Film Festival is the non-profit arts and educational organization "Yellow Archives". This charitable organization is registered in Rio de Janeiro and officially recognized by the Brazilian Government. Important Partners of the festival are the Heinrich Boell Foundation Brazil, Rio de Janeiro's Museum of Modern Art MAM-Rio and the Technical State School for TV, Cinema, Tourism and Events - Adolpho Bloch of the Foundation for Education and Science FAETEC.



Monday, June 10, 2013

8.2-18 WANFA "Pakala Parnaku" Art Exhibit Opening & Benefit Auction | Western Australian Nuclear Free Alliance





The West Australia Nuclear Free Alliance is hosting an exciting two week art exhibition at the Moores Building in Fremantle from August 2nd – 18th 2013. The Pakala Parnaku - stand up for the land - exhibition features artists from across Australia and many local Indigenous artists from Leonora and Wiluna. All funds raised will go towards WANFA and their important work in Aboriginal communities across WA.

Opening hours All week 10- 4pm
Exhibition Opening + Auction Friday 2nd August 6pm -8pm
Hiroshima and Nagasaki anniversary Poetry of Peace 9th August – time tbc


Pakala Parnaku art exhibition August 2013
Western Australian Nuclear Free Alliance





Monday, May 27, 2013

281_Anti Nuke's anger at authority is at a critical mass | The Japan Times






More than two years after the triple reactor meltdowns at the Fukushima No. 1 nuclear power plant, hundreds of thousands of residents of the Tohoku region of northeastern Honshu remain displaced, the power station teeters on the brink of further disaster and large swaths of northern Japan are so irradiated they’ll be uninhabitable for generations to come. But today in Tokyo, it is as though March 11, 2011, never happened. The streets are packed with tourists and banners herald the city’s 2020 Olympic bid; the neon lights are back on and all memories of post-meltdown power savings seem long forgotten.
Given this apparent mood of collective amnesia, the large poster on a wall near Shibuya Station comes as a surprise. It shows a little girl wearing a long red dress stenciled with the words “3.11 is not over” — nearby another poster depicts a Rising Sun flag seeping blood and the message “Japan kills Japanese.”
These posters — and dozens of others pasted around Tokyo — are the work of Japanese artist 281_Anti Nuke. While the origins of his chosen name are murky, the way in which his subversively simple images force passersby to stop — and think — has led to comparisons with British street artist Banksy. 281′s designs have also made him a target for Japan’s far right, who have branded him a dangerous criminal and urged the public to help put a stop to his activities.
This degree of controversy has forced 281 to wrap his true identity in a veil of secrecy, but after a convoluted series of negotiations, he finally agreed to his first newspaper interview. Throughout the meeting in a Shibuya coffee shop, 281 wore a cotton face mask and dark glasses; a disguise which helped him blend in seamlessly among the capital’s fashion-conscious hay-fever sufferers.
“On March 11, 2011, I was in Tokyo when the earthquake hit. I’d never experienced anything like that before. It felt like a bad dream,” 281 explained in a soft-spoken voice belying the fury of his designs.
Like the other 13 million residents of Tokyo, he survived the initial quake unharmed, but the following weeks triggered a seismic shift in his political outlook: “Before March 2011, I’d never been involved in activism of any kind. I’d trusted the Japanese government. But then the cracks started appearing,” he said.
First there were the revelations that the government had concealed the meltdowns, followed by news that they had hidden information regarding the dispersal of radiation. 281 came to the conclusion that there was very little natural about this disaster: It had occurred as a result of ties between the Japanese government and the nuclear power station’s operators, Tokyo Electric Power Co. (Tepco) — both of which were now determined to keep the truth hidden from the public.
Three months after the meltdowns, 281′s anger reached critical mass and he felt compelled to take action. Despite having no background in art, he decided that the best way to spread awareness was to take his message to the streets.
The first design he created was a three-eyed gas mask with two mouth pieces and the word “Pollution” written below it. The image satirized the logo of Tepco, which was as recognizable to most Japanese residents as the golden arches of McDonald’s or the Nike swoosh. 281 printed the gas mask onto 20-cm-tall stickers then stuck them around central Tokyo — on abandoned buildings and construction-site barricades. He avoided private property, but had few qualms targeting the city’s ubiquitous Tepco meter boxes and electric transformer units.

Over the following months, 281 put up hundreds more posters and stickers to remind the public what, he believed, the Japanese government and Tepco were conspiring to make people forget. His best-known image depicts a little girl wearing a poncho and rubber galoshes; beneath her feet is the message, “I hate rain,” punctuated with a triple-triangle radiation mark...


more > 281_Anti Nuke's anger at authority is at a critical mass | The Japan Times



see also
whats up: 281_Anti nuke - Documentary Trailer



食べ物に気を付けろ :: CARE YOUR FOOD • 281antinuke






食べ物に気を付けろ :: CARE YOUR FOOD


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Tuesday, April 30, 2013

281_Anti nuke - Documentary Trailer




281_Anti nuke - Documentary Trailer from Uchujin

Uchujin -The Blog: I’m very pleased to be able to show the trailer for my new documentary “281_Anti nuke.” Post Fukushima, a young father and artist assumes a mask and the name ’281_Anti nuke’ and takes to the streets of Tokyo angering right wing users of the Internet.”
Filmed over more than a year after seeing his work everywhere in Shibuya and finally making contact with him, it was a delicate situation in which his identity was hidden from me at all times, even now I have never seen his face, I do not know his real name, where he lives or what he does for a job.
His fear of the police and the far right means that he is very careful to maintain his anonimity at all times.
Called by some the Japanese Banksy, a moniker that does not do this soft spoken man justice as his work and his motivation are uniquely his.
The full 20 minute film is currently being submitted to film festivals and so will not appear here for sometime, but if you are lucky you may be able to catch a private or preview screening around Tokyo. I’ll keep you posted.
Big thanks to:-
The musicians who let me use their music for free, Frying DutchmanÁrni KristjánssonRepeat Pattern and Fleck E.S.C.
The music in the trailer is taken from the amazing track “Human Error” by Frying Dutchman.
see the 20 minute live performance here if you haven’t yet I strongly recommend it!
Roth Management & Ryan Roth for liasing with 281, smoothing the course to the finished film and being a very nice man.
Ian Thomas Ash for all of his help and advice in the final stages of the film.
A special huge thank you to Erina Suto my co-producer/co-editor and translator without whom this project would have been impossible.
Love and Hugs always.
And, of course, Thanks to 281 for participating.



Uchujin -The Blog281_Anti nuke - Documentary Trailer | Uchujin -The Blog






Friday, April 26, 2013

Beyond Nuclear - Remembering Chernobyl, 27 years on. "Life" in the exclusion zone.




"Most of the people who live in the villages around the Zone have diseases caused by radiation. Most of them are old, and their level of mortality is really high." So writes photographer, Arthur Bondar, based in Kiev, Ukraine, who started to visit Chernobyl in 2008, and has returned frequently in the past five years to photograph the villages and the people living near the exclusion zone. He found intense suffering and a resignation to the inevitable fate of living in a highly radioactive area. Read more and view Bondar's photos.

Beyond Nuclear - Remembering Chernobyl, 27 years on. "Life" in the exclusion zone


Sunday, March 31, 2013

anti-nuclear posters from 17 different countries


via www.Laka.org | Informatie over kernenergie



Australia Stop Uranium Action Day, 1978Non-nuclear future, 1978-83Stop Jabiluka Mine, 1998Atomic Australia, 2000









Austria Nein zu Zwentendorf, 1978EUsterreich. Spannung steigt, 1994Lasst dass Uran in der Erde, 1997The Lie of the Peacefull Atom, 2004









Belgium Democratie, 1978-82Doel-bewust stoppen, 1979Geen atoomafval in zee, 1983Varkens kunnen vliegen, 1996









Denmark (no text - comic), 1975-80Atom-march, 1978Rock mod Atomkraft, 1983Slut op om, 1990-2000









Finland Maan puoloustus-Leiri, 1982Windscale, Harrisburg, Tshernobyl, 1987Jäähyväista Ydinvoimalle, 2002Tshernobyl Paiva, 2003









France Malville: occupons de site nucleaire, 1976Non a L'uranium, 1980Sortons de l'age du nucleaire, 2001festival du Bure, 2006









Germany Grossdemonstration Bonn, 1979Brokdorf 80, 1980Gorleben ist üeberall, 1996-98Widerstand braucht Phantasie, 2004









Netherlands Dodewaard gaat dicht!, 1980Schoonstroom, 1986Borssele Dicht!, 1986Kernenergie nee bedankt, 2006









South-Africa Gegen das Atomkomplott, 1975Gegen Atomare Zusammenarbeit, 1978Non a la centrale nucleaire, 1980Nuclear energy costs the Earth, 2002









South-Korea Remember Chernobyl, 1996No, 1997Stop nuclear waste transportation, 1997Beyond Nukes, 2001









Spain Cementerio nuclear No, 1988Vandellos Chernobil, 1989Cadena humana a Asco i Vandellos, 1990-2000Manifestacion por el cierre de Almaraz, 2005









Sweden Barsebaeck-Marsch, 1977Stoppa Pleutajokk!, 1980Atomkraft? Nej tack!, 1981Barsebaeck-marsch, 1982









Switzerland Atomschutz Initiative,JA!, 1978Wir werden Kaiseraugst verhindern, 1980Tschernobyl 1700km, Fessenheim 56km, 1986Strom ohne Atom, 2003









Turkey Nukleer karsiti Kongre, 1992Enerjide cozum mu? 1993Akkuyu Chernobil Olmasin, 1996Nukleer santral yaptirmayacagiz, 2000









Ukraine (no text)Chernobyl museum, 1993No EBRD money for k2/r4, 1999Stop Rivne-2, Khmelnitsky-4, 1999









United Kingdom Stop Sizewell B, 1979Stop RTZ, 1981A great energy is about to be released, 1986is digging a hole really the answer? 1990-93









United States of America no more nuclear victims, 1979No nukes, March on Washington, 197915th Anniversary of TMI accident, 1994Coming soon, to roads near you, 2002






laka.org | anti-nuclear posters from 17 different countries