This is an aside titled 'Japan’s Guernica' dated 11/19/08

Taro Okamoto’s Asu no Shinwa (”Myth of Tomorrow”) depicting the bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, finally has a permanent home near the Keio Inokashira line in the Shibuya station. The painting, compared to Picasso’s Guernica, was originally commissioned by a Mexico City luxury hotel in late sixties. “Taro wanted the Japanese to surmount the misery of the past rather than to retract inwardly — to blossom outward and look ahead. That was a radical concept in 1967. He was probably the only Japanese person who even considered that,” says the developer Manuel Suarez. Asu no Shinwa was missing for decades, “until it was found in 2003 by Okamoto’s wife in a yard for building materials in Mexico City.”

Posted by Joanne on Nov. 19, 2008 Tagged: , , , , , , , , ,

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