Exhibition poster of 《And the silence goes away》 © Factory2

We cannot remember all the time and events that have taken place since we were born, nor can we record them all. Furthermore, events from generations we have not experienced may even seem to have nothing to do with “me.”

Yet we are simply beings thrown into the world, and the past and history before we were thrown into it clearly exist. Are not the holes densely present in official history, the forgotten histories, precisely the histories that remain in our daily lives each time?

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By shaking the hierarchies of power and discourse and focusing on the role of the archive as counter-information, the exhibition 《And the silence goes away》 unfolds an “alternative history” within the space of the “exhibition hall.”

Since the late twentieth century, a contemporary tendency has emerged within discourse to pay attention to the marginal and the Other, yet the lives of those who wander cultural marginality—non-Western people, workers, local residents, women, queer people, and others—still exist while remaining obscured.

The exhibition focuses on their lives and seeks to break down systems and heighten the stickiness of solidarity by using “text, image, document, and sound.”

References