documentary film about the Fukushima nuclear crisis
with Keibo Oiwa, Japanese author, activist & philosopher
20 min
“Finding a positive thing in a very negative picture is the most difficult, most challenging type of criticism.” Keibo Oiwa
Read MoreThe former exclusion zone Minamisoma, May 2012
Read more "Exclusion | FUKUSHIMA | 2012"FROM GEONEMESIS TO NEOGENESIS
Read more "WELT | NOVA KOSMOGRAFIKA | 2022"QUANTUM CINEMA OF PERILOUS PROBABILITY (AND ULTIMATE UNCERTAINTY)
#unescocityofmediaarts
Read more "Trinity Twins | 2022/23"Online Lecture at Universität für angewandte Kunst Wien
November 26 2020, 14h CET
Read more "°ABOUT"“Sometimes, it felt like the inner workings of the universe made visible. It revolved slowly, then grew in complexity until it seemed, in substance if not style, like a collaboration between da Vinci, Picasso and Stephen Hawking.”
Evening Post, New Zealand
documentary film about the Fukushima nuclear crisis
with Keibo Oiwa, Japanese author, activist & philosopher
20 min
“Finding a positive thing in a very negative picture is the most difficult, most challenging type of criticism.” Keibo Oiwa
Read MoreIn the Episode “NUCLEAR ZEN I – KEIBO OIWA” we will introduce Keibo Oiwa’s meditation on 3/11 and the events following the disaster of Fukushima Daiichi.
Read more "1001 SUNS at 11 Bienal de Artes Mediales in Santiago de Chile"How I stole the radioactive
Tree of Half-Life
from Chernobyl
“Radioactive traces will be the heritage to the next generations and not the cultural artifacts.”
Margit Rosen on Pulse8 by Michael Saup, 1992