Assalamu aleikum.

"Let them eat laser images" is the new motto of Karzai's Northern
Alliance faction.

High tech solar panels and windmills will be used to project the idols
onto the walls of Bamiyan as the people suffer below with no
electricity of their own. Four weekends of four hours each at a cost
of US$9 million!

While the artist promises that 100 of the 140 windmills he will
construct to power the lasers will be used to power nearby villages,
40 of them will not be so used, and there is no maintenance plan in
place for any of the windmills. When all the windmills become
nonfunctional in a year or so after their construction, they will
themselves become an architectural blight to match that of the
idolatrous statues that the Taliban properly eliminated. 

This cultural imperialism is all at the behest of Karzai and UNESCO.
The old idolatry was of Buddha - the new idolatry is of technology.


-


Artist to 'Re-Create' Laser Buddhas
Associated Press
By SOLVEJ SCHOU
August 8, 2005
http://news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl==story&u==/ap/20050808/ap_en_ot/laser_buddhas_2

-
photos:

Artist Hiro Yamagata sits inside a holographic cube built for an
upcoming exhibition, Monday, Aug. 1, 2005, at his studio in Torrance,
Calif. The boxes are smaller size versions of the box which he built
at the Guggenheim Museum in Bilbao, Spain, in 2004. Yamagata plans to
commemorate two 1,600-year-old Buddha statues, destroyed by the former
Taliban, by projecting multi-colored laser images onto the clay
cliffsides where they once stood. (AP Photo/Kevork Djansezian)
http://news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl==story&u==/050808/482/la10308081928

Internationally renowned artist Hiro Yamagata stands next to
holographic cubes Monday, Aug. 1, 2005, at his studio in Torrance,
Calif. Yamagata plans to commemorate two 1,600-year-old Buddha
statues, destroyed by the former Taliban, by projecting multi-colored
laser images onto the clay cliffsides where they once stood. (AP
Photo/Kevork Djansezian)
http://news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl==story&u==/050808/482/la10208081927
-

LOS ANGELES - When the former Taliban regime in Afghanistan destroyed
two 1,600-year-old Buddha statues lining Bamiyan Valley's soaring
cliffs, the world shook with shock at the demise of such huge
archaeological treasures. Now, artist Hiro Yamagata plans to
commemorate the towering Buddhas by projecting multicolored laser
images onto the clay cliffsides where the figures once stood.

"I'm doing a fine art piece. That's my purpose — not for human rights,
or for supporting religion or a political statement," said the
58-year-old artist, whose other laser works include a permanent
display at the Guggenheim Museum in Bilbao, Spain.

Against a canvas of desert darkness, 14 laser systems will project 140
overlapping faceless "statues" sweeping four miles across Bamiyan's
cliffs in neon shades of green, pink, orange, white and blue. Each
image will continuously change color and pattern.

Powered by solar panels and windmills, the 125- to 175-foot-high
squiggle-style, Day-Glo images — the same size as the original Buddhas
— would be in stark contrast to the austere, rural valley below, a
land wracked by poverty and violence; a land that has little
electricity of its own.

In March 2001, Taliban militants disregarded worldwide protests and
used dynamite and artillery to blow up the original fifth-century
statues, famed for their size and location along the ancient Silk Road
linking Europe and Central Asia. The fundamentalist group considered
the Buddhas idolatrous and anti-Muslim.

"The destruction of the twin towers and the two Buddhas have been
linked as a moment in time," said Robert Brown, 60, an art historian
from the University of California, Los Angeles, and a curator of
Southeast Asian art at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art.
"Yamagata's lasers obviously have a commemorative notion to them, like
the 9/11 memorial in New York."

Afghan government officials first approached Yamagata in 2003 about
the project and gave him conditional approval last year, pending a
green light from the United Nations Educational, Scientific and
Cultural Organization.

UNESCO has been a prominent presence in Bamiyan, evaluating ways to
preserve mural paintings in caves surrounding the Buddhas.

"They are the ones who will make a decision and will advise us," Gulam
Sakhi Yousafzai, former acting deputy minister in charge of arts and
culture in Afghanistan, said in an interview with The Associated
Press. "They are the experts. We are waiting for their response."

Bamiyan provincial Gov. Habiba Sarobi told the AP that she was aware
of Yamagata's proposal, and hoped UNESCO could prove the cliffs would
not be damaged by the 80-100 watt laser beams, which would be
permanently projected every Sunday night for four hours.

"If there is a way to do it so there is no environmental impact, we
would support it as it would boost tourism and the images would remind
us of what (the cliffs) once looked like," Sarobi said.

Letters obtained by The Associated Press, sent to Yamagata from
physics and chemistry experts at the University of Antwerp and
Catholic University of Leuven in Belgium, noted that the beams will
not affect the cliffs because of low power levels cast from a safe
distance of between six and eight miles.

Zahir Aziz, Afghan ambassador to UNESCO, said he would strongly
recommend Yamagata's lasers if they went through UNESCO. He also
confirmed that a Swiss plan to rebuild the Buddhas at $30 million a
statue is no longer in the works.

Meanwhile, Yamagata, who estimates his project's cost at up to $9
million, has been busy amassing funds, materials and workers for his
vision from his home-base at an industrial warehouse in suburban
Torrance, Calif.

The walls are adorned with colorful photographs and sketches of the
Bamiyan and other upcoming projects, including a display in the Fiji
Islands where he will create a huge holographic Mylar cube suspended
on top of one of the islands. Smaller-scale versions of his most
famous conceptual works — including the house-sized holographic cubes
exhibited at Bilbao's Guggenheim and other places throughout the world
— are scattered around the studio.

Shortly after his 2003 meeting with Afghan officials in Tokyo,
Yamagata visited Bamiyan and was moved by its orphaned children,
squalid living conditions and lack of electricity. He decided then
that his artwork should also give something back to the war-torn region.

Of the roughly 140 4,000-kilowatt windmills he plans to ship into
Afghanistan for the Bamiyan project, Yamagata said that 100 of them
would provide power for surrounding villages. He also wants to hire 40
local young men, typically jobless, to dig foundations for the
windmills, starting in March 2006. Completion of the project is set
for June 2007.

Yamagata, a longtime Los Angeles resident who was born in Japan, said
he has already secured cosponsorship from Mercedes-Benz, and will
choose a windmill company in December.

"Many people say, 'My art will heal the people.' I always avoid 'heal
the people,'" Yamagata said. "Of course, I help people, but it's more
about not harming people. An artist to me is more about inner matter."

___

Associated Press Writer Daniel Cooney in Afghanistan contributed to
this report.

http://news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl==story&u==/ap/20050808/ap_en_ot/laser_buddhas_2






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