December 4-20, 2023, Building B8, Bovisa Campus, via Durando 10, Milan
The School of Design and Poli.Design host the exhibition "Hiroshima. Conoscere per non ripetere" within the Design Against War initiative.
The exhibition is part of a program of events about nuclear disarmament organized by Hiroshima Prefectural Government, Hiroshima Organization for Global Peace (HOPe) and supported by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Japan. The program of events aims to instil lasting memories of the G7 Hiroshima Summit. By dispatching Japanese youth to the G7 countries for dialogues, panel exhibitions, and VR experiences on the outcomes of the Summit regarding nuclear weapon issues, the program aims to reignite momentum for global nuclear disarmament.
Leaders of the G7 countries and guest nations like South Korea, Indonesia, and India engaged with the grim reality of atomic bombings at the Hiroshima G7 Summit, which took place in May 2023.
Their visit to the Peace Memorial Museum, the dialogue with the A-bomb survivor, and the solemn act of laying flowers at the Cenotaph of the Victims of the Atomic Bomb highlighted the necessity of nuclear disarmament in the face of a challenging global environment.
This program of events was developed to remind citizens of the continuing significance of the G7 Hiroshima Summit since temporal currents move these significant events further from public memory. Japanese high school and university students possessing a strong interest in nuclear issues, have been sent to G7 countries and will reach Milan for a panel exhibition at Politecnico di Milano in collaboration with the initiative Design Against War, organised by the School of Design.
December 4th at 3:00 pm, room B2.0.1., Building B2, ground floor, Bovisa Campus
Join us to take part in the opening of the panel exhibition to discuss the issue of nuclear weapons with students from Hiroshima and to know more about the program of events. The exhibition and the VR experience will open afterwards in Building B8 on the same campus.
Entry for both the opening and the exhibition is free.