Japanese World War II forced prostitution and art


This July 2013 video is called Arirang Special: Comfort Women, One Last Cry.

By Katherine Brooks in the USA:

11/25/13 EST

The History Of ‘Comfort Women‘: A WWII Tragedy We Can’t Forget

The phrase “comfort women” is a controversial term that refers to approximately 200,000 women who were recruited as prostitutes by the Imperial Japanese Army during World War II. Many of the young women were forced into servitude and exploited as sex slaves throughout Asia, becoming victims of the largest case of human trafficking in the 20th century.

The trade of comfort women is thus a massive violation of human rights that’s been left out of our textbooks, leaving the individuals embroiled in the atrocious practice to be remembered merely as abstract characters in a taboo history. Korean-born, New York-based artist Chang-Jin Lee seeks to correct this constructed view in “Comfort Women Wanted,” a multimedia exhibition that delves into the personal histories of the Korean, Chinese, Taiwanese, Indonesian, Filipino, and Dutch women whose identities have long been overlooked and misunderstood.

Comfort women

Comfort Women Wanted. Ad-like billboard of a Taiwanese “comfort woman” survivor at The Incheon Women Artists’ Biennale, Korea, 2009. Image courtesy of the artist.

“In Asia, the comfort women issue remains taboo and controversial, while at the same time, it is almost unknown in the West,” Lee explains in a statement about the project. “Human trafficking is the fastest growing industry in the world, and the second largest business after arms dealing in the 21st century. So, the comfort women issue is not just about the past, but it is very relevant today.”

The title of Lee’s show refers to the advertisements found in wartime newspapers; a failed attempt at attracting volunteers into prostitution. Instead, young women as young as 11-years-old were kidnapped and forced into service where they faced rape, torture and extreme violence at military camps known as “comfort stations.”

“Most were teenagers… and were raped by between 10 to 100 soldiers a day at military rape camps,” Lee states on her website. “Women were starved, beaten, tortured, and killed. By some estimates only 25 to 30 percent survived the ordeal.”

Comfort women

Comfort Women Wanted. Video still of a former Japanese soldier during WWII. Image courtesy of the artist.

In an attempt to shine light on this oft-forgotten segment of WWII history, Lee’s exhibit mimics the old advertisements, displaying the real faces of comfort women as they appeared in the 1930s and ’40s, framed by the words of their trade. These striking images are shown alongside stark portraits of the women who are still alive today, many of whom appear in the accompanying video installation. There, Lee interviews individuals she met during travels throughout Asia in 2008, discussing their experiences as comfort women and their modern-day dreams and desires.

In one of the more startling moments of the documentary-like footage, Lee speaks with a former soldier, Yasuji Kaneko, who recounts the terrifying lives of captive women he encountered in hopes “we never repeat what we did in the war and that there will never be war again.

Chelsea

Comfort Women Wanted. Ad-like kiosk poster of a Dutch “comfort woman” survivor in English, with QR Code, in collaboration with The New York City Department of Transportation’s Urban Art Program. Public Art in Chelsea, New York City, 2013. Image courtesy of the artist.

“Comfort Women Wanted” provides a platform for women to expunge their illicit memories while archiving the harsh reality of mid century violence against women. Drenched in red, black and white, the exhibition is a visual overload that makes clear its aim to carve a place in our collective memory, paying tribute to moments that have long been removed from contemporary discussions of truth and justice. At the same time, Lee’s images do more than harken to the past. The portraits foretell a dark future — one that will persist if crimes against women continue to exist only in the murky, deep ends of our shared history.

Lee’s works are currently on view at Wood Street Galleries in Pittsburgh until December 1, 2013. You can see a preview of the exhibition below and a trailer for her video installation here. Let us know your thoughts on the project in the comments.

Comfort women

Comfort Women Wanted. Video still. Image courtesy of the artist.

Ohio

Comfort Women Wanted. Ad-like prints, multichannel video installation, at Spaces Gallery, Cleveland, Ohio, 2011. Image courtesy of the artist.

Fighter

Comfort Women Wanted. Video still of a former Chinese “comfort woman” survivor. Image courtesy of the artist.

Ohio

Comfort Women Wanted. Ad-like billboard of a Taiwanese “comfort woman” survivor, at Spaces Gallery, Cleveland, Ohio, 2011. Image courtesy of the artist.

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