Category: English

Tibet supporters in Japan have delivered six hundred petitions to the Ueno Royal Museum

By IAATE, 2009/12/31 18:55

Tibet supporters in Japan have delivered six hundred petitions to the Ueno Royal Museum in response to their controversial show “Tibet: Treasure from the Roof of the World”

Date: December 24, 2009 at 3pm
Location: Ueno Royal Museum, Tokyo
Recipient: Mr. Seiichi Muzuno (Director)
Delivered by: Team Tibet (Tatsumura Yukari), We Love Free Tibet (Kubo Takashi), The Group for Palden Gyatso (Mr. Osada),
Japan Coordinator for ITSN (Mr. Kamata) and 2 others.

Purpose:

As leaders of Japan’s Tibet support groups, we have collected petitions from the public to demand that the exhibition organiser include the accurate modern history and culture of Tibet and to condemn the museum for ignoring our demands since the opening of the exhibition. Six hundred signatures have been collected in a remarkably short amount of time. The petition was directed to the following organisations that have been involved with the exhibition:

Ueno Royal Museum
Daiko Advertising Inc.
The Ministry of Culture

Mr. Seiichi Mizuno, the director of Ueno Royal Museum, has agreed to personally receive the petition, and we had an opportunity to question him face-to-face. The following is the conversation from our meeting with him:

Q: Please explain how you have curated this exhibition.

A: When we were deciding whether or not we should have lent our museum to the exhibition as a venue, we expressed our concerns to the organizers and told them to be extra careful concerning the unrest in Lhasa and Uyghur. Since Asahi newspaper had been involved with the Free Tibet exhibition in the past, I am assuming that Asahi wanted to appear balanced in their approach to China. However, the most important point for us is the artistic value of the exhibition. According to specialists this exhibition has its artistic value; therefore, we decided to lend the museum to this exhibition.

When the exhibit began in Fukuoka, there were protests. We thought
that canceling the exhibition in Tokyo would have far reaching
consequences and would severely impact the museum’s international relations. Therefore, we decided to continue the exhibition at
the Ueno Royal Museum. We would use Daiko Advertising Inc. as an
organizer and look to Asahi newspaper to provide publicity.

Q: What is your opinion of displaying the stolen Buddhist artefacts by China?

A: This is a complex issue and even more so from the viewpoint of the international museum community. We have exhibited items from the Louvre and the British Museum in the past. We cannot single out this event and comment on the issue even if they were actually stolen by China’s Peoples Army.

Q: The display of those precious Buddhist artefacts is quite poor.

A: The specialists were overseeing this area. I can give you an example of when the statue of the National Treasure Ganjinwajo was shown in France: the display of the statue was totally unlike what we normally would do in Japan. The display reflects the nationality of the viewers. Ideally, the Tibetan Buddhist artefacts should be displayed as close to the original style in Tibet; however, we left its supervision to the specialists- Daiko Inc. which is in charge of it. I must honestly say that I was unaware of that concern.

Q: What is your opinion on the fact that the exhibition is misleading the public on the issue of Tibet by excluding certain historical facts of Tibet?

A: So far over 120,000 people have visited the exhibition, and I assume that 90 percent of the visitors were not aware of the issue of Tibet.
In that context, rather than taking it as “misleading the pubic on the issue,” I hope we are providing an opportunity to develop an accurate understanding of Tibet for the visitors who come to see these artefacts. We hope to inspire some people to develop an accurate understanding of Tibet and the issues surrounding it. I believe that our mission as a museum is to exhibit valuable art, and I am proud to say that these Tibetan Buddhist artefacts from the exhibition are mysteriously beautiful.

Q: At the opening of the exhibition, a Tibet supporter and a Tibetan who reside in Japan spoke to a representative of Daiko Inc., regarding the exhibition. In the conversation, the representative commented “There are no Tibetan people as such. Only the Tibetan tribe (in China) exists.” What is your view of this comment?

A: That is clearly different from my view and it is an inconsiderate comment.
As far as our exhibition, “Tibet: Roof of the world,” I have my own personal doubt whether this event has lived up to the quality that the Ueno Royal Museum normally demands – I wonder if the exhibition paid an enough attention to the international focus on the Tibet issue. I am planning to report this to Daiko Inc. when the exhibition is over.

Q: The Ueno Royal Museum is a historic venue that has been maintained by the Japan Art Association, which was founded in 1879 (Meiji 12) and is headed by Prince Hitachinomiya. Perhaps, China wanted to have an association with the “Royal Museum” in order to legitimize its project.

A: I cannot answer that.

Report from Yukari Tatsumura who was in the team to deliver the petitions:

“I was pleased to have an opportunity to raise those questions directly to Mr. Mizuno, the director of the Ueno Royal Museum. The conversation gave me the impression that the event was purposely designed to promote the Chinese government as the benevolent guardian of Tibetan culture to the Japanese public. They did this by creating a wide range of advertising campaigns on the event through Japanese media.”

29th Sep Press release

By IAATE, 2009/09/30 15:03

29 September 2009

Tokyo: China’s “Tibet: Stolen Exhibition” opens as Tibetan and their supporters organized protests. Tibet groups firmly condemn the remarks of the Exhibition Committee Chief (DAIKO Advertising Inc.), ” Tibetans do not exist. We only recognize the Tibet tribe.”

Continue reading '29th Sep Press release'»

Tibetans protest Japan exhibit

By IAATE-NY, 2009/09/29 05:26

From Straits Times (AFP)

TOKYO – JAPAN-BASED supporters of Tibetan spiritual leader the Dalai Lama on Monday protested against an exhibition in Tokyo on their Himalayan homeland, in which they say China misrepresents their history.

Continue reading 'Tibetans protest Japan exhibit'»

Official Appeal from the Liaison office of H.H. the Dalai Lama for Japan: “To the People of Japan”

By IAATE-NY,

from the Official website of the Liaison office of H.H. the Dalai Lama for Japan

Continue reading 'Official Appeal from the Liaison office of H.H. the Dalai Lama for Japan: “To the People of Japan”'»

A Tibet Exhibit Committee member said “There are no Tibetans exist.”

By IAATE-NY,

Dear IAATE members:

I just came back from Japan and I wanted to let you know that the Tibet Exhibit in Tokyo has finally opened at the Ueno Royal Museum.

Continue reading 'A Tibet Exhibit Committee member said “There are no Tibetans exist.”'»

Flyer in English / 英語版チラシが出来ました!

By IAATE, 2009/09/25 15:08
Click to Download PDF File.

Click to Download PDF File.

上野に来るたくさんの外国人観光客にも、この展覧会について知ってほしい。
そんな想いから、英語版チラシをご用意しました。

PDFファイルをダウンロードして、どうぞご利用ください。

ダウンロードはこちら>>

“There is no such a thing as ‘Tibetan’” Mr.Taisuke Tsurumaki Says

By IAATE-NYC, 2009/09/19 15:01

At the private opening today at the Ueno Royal Museum our member and a Tibetan woman interviewed Mr. Tsurumaki who is the rep. of the exhibition committee.

“There is no such a thing as ‘Tibetan person.’ There is a Tibetan tribe (in China,)” he said.

He said it to the Tibetan person who was standing in front of him.

We wonder- when one receives so much money does it make him so vulgar?

Here is the footage of Mr. Tsurumaki that is spreading out so quickly throughout the world:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RqtOdgC5Lfk

2004 Newsweek article on Tibet exhibit

By IAATE-NY, 2009/09/14 00:24

“Himalayan Controversy”

Newsweek International

March 14 2005 issue   By Vibhuti Patel

The New York opening of the Rubin Museum of Art’s new exhibit, “Tibet: Treasures From the Roof of the World,” has ignited a hot political controversy. Tibetan refugees picketed what they claimed was a display of the “stolen heritage of Tibetan people,” while Tibetan organizations set up a Website [http://rubinmuseum.org] denouncing the RMA’s decision to “help” the Chinese in their “cultural offensive” to promote China’s image and tourism to Tibet.

At issue: more than 100 treasures drawn from Tibet’s premier art museums – the Potala Palace, the Norbulingka Summer Palace and the Tibet Museum – all removed and shipped abroad by Chinese authorities, who rule Tibet with an iron hand. “The RMA stepped into the middle of our battle for survival,” says Lhadon Tethong, executive director of Students for a Free Tibet.

Curator Caron Smith insists that “these works are not ’stolen’ in a legal sense- our government recognizes Tibet as part of China.” Still, she adds, “the RMA is not against China but, as a museum for Himalayan art, we clearly support Tibet.” The never-before-exhibited objects -paintings, sculptures, seals – are exquisitely worked.

Most are priceless, stunning antiques from the ninth to early 20th centuries; some are crafted in rare media – ivory, conch, turquoise and  coral; others (like textiles woven from “split silk” in which strands are separated to create detailed pictorials) use bygone techniques. But activists insist the pleasure of viewing is tainted by the items’ provenance. “It’s valuable for people to see these works,” says Tibetan scholar Robert Thurman, “but it’s too soon to be working with people who are colonizing Tibet, crushing Tibetans. [RMA founder] Don Rubin liked the beauty of the objects, but it’s like having Hitler send you beautiful objects from a shtetl in Treblinka.”

Immediate Press Release

By IAATE, 2009/09/10 19:06

The Tokyo Protest Rally Against the Exhibition,
“Tibet: Treasure from the Roof of the World” on September 18th and 19th, 2009.

Since the International Alliance Against “Tibet: Treasure from the Roof of the World” Exhibition (IAATE) created the campaign website in June this year we have sent the director of the Ueno museum, Mr. Seiichi Mizuno, the Tibet exhibit committee and the cooperate sponsors of the exhibition an open letter.

Continue reading 'Immediate Press Release'»

A response from the Tibet Exhibit Committee

By IAATE-NY, 2009/08/29 02:53

So, we received the reply to our oppositional open letter from the Tibet Exhibit committee on behalf of all the sponsor companies.

Continue reading 'A response from the Tibet Exhibit Committee'»

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