Moro, Takeshi
Japanese, b. 1978
In the high-definition video Counting to 150,000 (2008), Moro responds to the extensive casualities that resulted from the atomic bombing of Hiroshima on August 6, 1945, using that lethal event as a starting point to ponder the challenge of coming to terms with death on a massive scale. "Casualties in atrocities are always reduced to a number, which in itself is an estimate," Moro writes. "The irony is that mass killing continues to occur from the lack of respect for individual lives and yet we record it in history with the arbitrary number that is just an approximation of lives lost. I wanted to see what it feels like to actually count deaths as opposed to approximating them with statistics." By common estimates, 150,000 people died in Hiroshima by the end of 1945—half of them at them at the moment of detonation. Moro's video records his painstaking effort over 35 hours to count out the corresponding number of grains of rice, setting them aside one by one with chopsticks.
Born in Tokyo in 1978, Takeshi Moro grew up in the United Kingdom and currently lives and works in both Chicago, IL and Columbus, OH. He completed a BA in Economics and Visual Arts at Brown University, Providence, RI (2001), and an MFA in Photography at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago (2008). His work has been exhibited nationally and internationally and residencies include: Skaftfell, Center for Visual Art, Seydisfirdi, Iceland (2011); Incheon Art Platform, Incheon, South Korea (2011); Arteles, Haukijarvi, Finland (2010); and Atlantic Center for the Arts, New Smyrna Beach, FL (2010). He has taught at Bowling Green State University, OH, Otterbein College in Columbus, OH, and Santa Clara University, CA.
American, b. 1977 Moscow, Russia