‘Nuclear
soup’: Japanese duo to serve Fukushima broth at London art fair
RT,
26
September, 2014
Would
you eat radioactive soup? That’s the somewhat unappetizing question
facing visitors to next month’s Frieze art fair in London.
The
fair, which is known for its eccentric conceptual art, will see a new
project in which brothers Tomoo and Ei Arakawa, who go under the
performance name “United Brothers”, make a soup using vegetables
grown in Fukushima, the Japanese prefecture hit in march 2011 by one
of the worst nuclear disasters in history.
The
region faced a devastating earthquake and tsunami which caused the
reactors to melt and nuclear material to seep out.
As
a result, thousands of residents of the area suffered permanent
health damage, particularly after consuming certain foods and water.
The
project, called “Does this soup taste ambivalent?” was created in
solidarity with victims affected by the nuclear disaster, the effects
of which are still being felt today.
The
soup’s main ingredient is the Daikon radish, a staple food in
Fukushima.
The
brothers, who are originally from Ikawa in Fukushima, will also
involve their mother in the project. Throughout the festival, she
will be making soup using the vegetables.
The
brothers have insisted that the soup is safe for consumption.
Describing
the exhibit, the frieze catalogue says that sharing food is a "gift”
that “represents the essence of hospitality, sharing and humanity”.
“However,
the soup United Brothers offer is laced with the (conceptual)
possibility that it may be radioactive,” it adds.
Frieze
director Matthew Soltover also assured the public that the food has
been tested and is safe, and that the art was actually a test of the
“psychological barrier”.
“It’s
one of those projects where you don’t know if there is going to be
a huge queue or whether no one is going to go near it,” he told The
Independent.
The
exhibit will be one of the many exhibitions taking place at the 12th
Frieze art fair in London, which involves 160 contemporary art
galleries.
The
fair will take place in Regent’s Park between 15-18 October, and
will include a number of works from Turner Prize winners
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