On one wall hangs a giant Thai flag torn in half but stitched up with a zipper. Nearby is a poster-sized news photograph of smoke mushrooming out of a Bangkok shopping mall, the gray cloud outlined by a skull.
Out of Thailand’s bloody political turmoil that ended in mid-May, an art exhibit has emerged called “Imagine Peace.”
Eighty artists have contributed works that include a rendition of the anti-government protesters’ rubber tire barricade — which sealed off parts of central Bangkok for weeks — to express “the desire for peace and reconciliation,” curator Apinan Poshyananda said.
The curator sounded calls for contributions to the international art world and received pieces from critically acclaimed friends Marina Abramovic and the late Louise Bourgeois, who sent two sculptures of clasped hands shortly before her death on May 31.
Reconciliation is the latest catchword in Thai politics today, as the government tries to heal a nation fractured by the worst political violence in nearly two decades. The 10 weeks of protests left 89 people dead and injured about 1,400.
The upheaval also inspired an outpouring of creativity.
“I painted every day during the protest to document my feelings,” said artist Kamin Lertchaiprasert, who described the crisis as the period “when Bangkok ceased to move.”
The protests ended May 19 when the army moved in at dawn to clear the streets, triggering a full day of clashes and dozens of arson attacks before peace was restored — a tenuous calm that most believe will not last.
The Red Shirt protesters were demanding the resignation of Thai Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva. Many were poor, rural supporters of the deposed fugitive former leader Thaksin Shinawatra, but their calls for more equality in Thailand struck a chord with a wide swath of society who say politicians can no longer ignore the need to address disparities and deep discontent.
“Peace will only happen when we kill greed and anger,” Kamin said.
To make his point he took an iconic image from May 19 — the burning of Bangkok’s Central World shopping mall — and painted a skull around the smoke.
The exhibit at the Bangkok Art and Culture Center, which runs through Aug. 22, is located just a block from the protest zone in central Bangkok, an area that protesters turned into a makeshift campsite enclosed by a barricade of stacked rubber tires and bamboo spears.
The Culture Ministry, which funded the exhibit, hopes it will contribute to a larger discussion about how Thailand can move past its political troubles, which most believe are on hold but not resolved.
The exhibit was cobbled together in three weeks. Organizers say they hope to rotate in new installations if more artists want to contribute and even expand onto the streets outside the gallery that were part of the protest zone.
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