Contemporary art fundamentally opposes war.
Thus, I oppose Japan’s new security legislation.
War creates separation between “we” and “enemies”.
Who are the “enemies” considered as a danger?
What are the profiles of these “enemies,” made into targets for unmanned aerial combat vehicles?
Where do the “enemies” in a state of war come from?
Who really are the “enemies,” positioned as evil to outside of the society?
The imagination of art goes to these “enemies”.
Time and time again, the history of art has praised war.
Not just as a result of unconditional obedience to orders.
A desire for war always lies in humans, which makes mankind’s extinction a superior aesthetic pleasure — “war is beautiful.”
An imperfect animal that senses “élan vital” in battles and killings, humans make war a spectacle.
On the monitor is a war taking place in a “far country”, giving no actual sense of violence and death.
Once distant from it, everyday life continues to go on, as if “the war did not take place”.
On the other hand, art has portrayed each person’s singular death that occurs in war.
It has conveyed how murderous actions thoroughly destroy the human mind.
It has expressed painful memories that afflict the future over many generations.
It has converted the emotion of violence and revenge, which would lead to war, into “lyrical terrorism”.
War creates separation between “we” and “enemies”.
In the midst of dichotomization between justice and evil, “barbarians”, who threaten the nation’s existence, are created.
Divisions, discrimination and dichotomies between different nationals, civilizations, cultures, races, economies and religions.
That is where a collective called “we” arises, automatizing the system of censorship and self-censorship.
The imagination of art goes to “we”.
Japan bears a future to be a neutral country that realizes high-level peace negotiations by thrusting into the thick of grudges, hatred and antagonism.
Proactive contribution to peace can be achieved by strategically taking advantage of Article 9 of the Japanese Constitution.
This must be a historical necessity based on remorse over World War II.
There are unbreakable contracts with the past.
Contemporary art thus fundamentally opposes war.
Signed
Meiro KoizumiMichiko Tsuda
Jun Miyagi
Migiwa Orimo
Toru Koyamada
Kazuhito Tanaka
Yohei Tomooka
Megumi Shimizu
NAKAJIMA Yuta
Yuka Tokuyama
Kazuhiko Yoshizaki
Rumiko Hagiwara
Koichi Tanibe
Jun Yang
Katsuhiro Saiki
Yayoi Yoshizawa
meosai
Satoshi Koganezawa
Keiji Saito
Naoya Fujita
Koki Tanaka
Yuki Okumura
Hanae Utamura
Jun Kawada
ON megumi Akiyoshi
Kokatsu Reiko
Hiromi Takai
Toichiro Tanaka
Kosuke Hatano
Hikaru Fujii
Yusuke Mitsufuji
Atsuko Nozaki
Keiko Goto
Sachiyo Honda
Yasuto Masumoto
Yoshio Shirakawa
Vincent Vandaele
Natsuko Kurashige
Rika Aki
Tamaki Kawaguchi
Ken Sasaki
Emi Endo
Fumio Inoue
Yuri Shirasaka
Ayako Osanai
Jun Fukae
Satoshi Otsuka
Satoshi Nakashima
Satoshi Hashimoto
Shiigi Shizune
Masami Kondo
Hiroshi Sunairi
Hiroki Yamamoto
Yuki Harada
Hitoshi Mori
Kaori Homma
Satoshi Uchiumi
Manabu Takano
Hiroshi Sugawara
Yukiko Nagakura
Masaki Nakayama
Shigeo Arikawa
Shiro Masuyama
Yaegashi Yoshihi
Ryo Fujii
Kaz. Sakurada
Hajime Nariai
Aisuke Kondo






















