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Cities on the Move was a major traveling exhibition curated by Hou Hanru and Hans Ulrich Obrist . The exhibition toured to various locations from 1997 to 1999, presenting the cultural impact of East Asia's rapid urban development in the late twentieth century through a mix of visual art, architecture, and film.[1]
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The exhibition opened in 1997 at the Vienna Secession in Austria, and then traveled in various forms to MoMA PS1, New York; CAPC Musée d’art contemporain de Bordeaux; the Louisiana Museum of Modern Art, Denmark; Hayward Gallery, London; Bangkok; and Kiasma, Helsinki.[2] Overall, it involved more than 150 architects, artists, filmmakers, and designers.[3] According to Asia Art Archive, Cities on the Move was “a landmark event in contemporary exhibition-making for its extensive use of urbanism theories, its strong involvement of architects, and its attempt to recreate an ever-evolving city within an exhibition space”, which included a continuous programme of performances, screenings, and discussions during the exhibition period.[3]
The exhibition's origins can be traced to 1990, when curators Hou Hanru and Hans Ulrich Obrist both moved to Paris, and Hou introduced Obrist to Chinese and Hong Kong art for the first time.[4] Conceived during a period of rapid urban and economic growth in East Asia, the exhibition's first iteration opened just a few months after the beginning of the 1997 Asian financial crisis, which saw the economic collapse of multiple countries in the region.
Cities on the Move presented “the dynamic and highly creative situation of contemporary urban visual culture in East Asia” in the context of the unprecedented growth of cities in the region.[1] The exhibition curators Hou Hanru and Hans Ulbrecht Obrist chose cities as a site to explore themes of modernisation such as consumerism, monumental architecture, traffic congestion, privacy and public space, and competitive urbanism.[1]
Over two years and across seven locations, the exhibition's curators and artists experimented with different strategies to respond to the unfolding sociocultural, economic, and political crises in Asia. In each setting, the project took on various forms through new commissions, artists, groupings and themes.
Cities on the Move was first installed on the eve of the hundredth anniversary of the Vienna Secession. It took place from 26 November 1997 to 18 January 1998.
The exhibition was staged at CAPC Musée d’art contemporain de Bordeaux in France from 5 June to 30 August 1998.[1]
The exhibition took place at MoMA PS1 in New York from 18 October 1998 to 10 January 1999.[1]
The exhibition was staged at Louisiana Museum of Modern Art in Humlebæk, Denmark, from 29 January to 21 April 1999.[1]
The exhibition took place at the Hayward Gallery, London, from 13 May to 27 June 1999.[1]
The Bangkok edition of Cities on the Move took place between 9 and 30 October 1999.[1] The exhibition was a collective endeavour by the Siam Society with the support and artistic contributions of the Asia Europe Foundation, in collaboration with European Union member states and the European Commission.
Based on the exhibition concept of Hou and Obrist, the Bangkok exhibition was co-ordinated by Ole Scheeren, Thomas Nordanstad and Albert Paraviwongchirachai, exhibition director of the Siam Society. More than 100 artists and architects from China, Indonesia, Japan, Korea, Malaysia, Philippines, Singapore, Thailand, and Europe took part.
Since the city had "no museum for contemporary art that could host a show like Cities on the Move", the organisers chose the city itself as the exhibition space, turning the life, people, and infrastructure of the city into the content of the exhibition.
The exhibition was staged at the Kiasma Museum of Contemporary Art, Helsinki, from 5 November to 19 December 1999.[1]
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