Universal / Remote
Since the late 20th century, people, capital, and information came to move on a global scale. We entered a new phase in the 2010s along with the proliferation of smart devices and issues such as excessive tourism, shifting of industry’s production costs and environmental impact to developing nations, the digital divide and so forth were only worsening as the 2020s dawned. And while the outbreak of a pandemic that recognizes no borders suddenly put the brakes on the movement of people, the limitless flow of capital and information showed no sign of stopping. In fact, it seems we are seeing the true visage of capital and information systems for the first time. The rich and the poor, the powerful and the powerless: imbalances in our world are becoming more explicit all the time.The exhibition title Universal / Remote references prevailing conditions in the 21st century as capital and data flow freely on a global scale. Conveying comical aspects of the excesses of surveillance and high-tech networks, as well as the profound isolation of human beings, works in this exhibition seem to grapple head-on with the current era and with the post-COVID world. The exhibition presents the works of 8 artists and a group of 3 artists that address the state of society in the 21st century as shaped by the conditions described above, focusing on two concepts, “Constant Growth at a Pan-Global Scale” and “The Remote Individual.”
- Artist
- Daisuke Ida Xu Bing Trevor Paglen Hito Steyerl, Giorgi Gago Gagoshidze, Miloš Trakilović Maiko Jinushi Tina Enghoff Jeamin Cha Evan Roth Natsuko Kiura
- Organized by
- Hiroshima City Museum of Contemporary Art
- Supported by
- Hiroshima Prefecture, Hiroshima Municipal Board of Education, Chugoku Shimbun, Asahi Shimbun Hiroshima General Bureau, Mainichi Shimbun Hiroshima Bureau, Yomiuri Shimbun Hiroshima General Bureau, NHK Hiroshima Broadcasting Station, Chugoku Broadcasting, Television Shin-Hiroshima, Hiroshima Television, Hiroshima Home Television, Hiroshima FM Broadcasting, Onomichi FM Broadcasting
- Planning support by
- The National Art Center, Tokyo
- Website
- Universal / Remote
Installation view: Universal / Remote, Hiroshima City Museum of Contemporary Art Photo : Yoshitaka Ito