July 16, 20196 yr New culture minister urged to abandon propaganda focus By Phatarawadee Phataranawik The Nation Former mayor of Pattaya, Ittipol Khunpluem, who takes over as culture minister in General Prayut Chan-o-cha’s second government, will face plenty of challenges in using “soft power” to make Thailand the hub for creative industry in Asean. The Nation conducted an exclusive interview with Prof Apinan Poshyananda, former permanent secretary of the Culture Ministry, on the incoming administration’s culture policies and whether the new minister will be able to rise to the challenges. Apinan is currently the artistic director of Bangkok Art Biennale. What do you think the new culture minister will do to move the country forward using culture as a key tool? Apinan: Congratulations to the new minister … he will need a lot of support. We can expect to see a continuation of the last government’s culture policies based on mandates as propaganda for populism and Thai-ness. Songs that arouse nationalistic fervour, cultural festivals and parades to entertain the masses. But as former mayor of Pattaya, the new minister will clearly be able to differentiate between good virtues and bad vices. The second Prayut government promises to promote Thai “purity” and “smile-a-while” campaigns as well as nationalistic jingoism, manipulating culture as a key tool. What policy should the new minister issue immediately? Apinan: The new minister urgently needs to diffuse the schism and distrust between the authorities and the public and youth regarding issues of censorship and controls on art-based protest such as students expressing their dissent through the decoration of trays used in teacher-respect ceremonies, and the work of [graffiti artist] Headache Stencil. Instead of controlling expressions of dissent, he should immediately order the removal of the Buddha image created by National Artist Panya Vijinthanasarn, which is being disrespectfully displayed in front of the toilets at the Paradiso Café at the international art exhibition Venice Biennale. Even foreign visitors have raised concerns about the inappropriateness and lack of decorum in the display of this work. The curator, artist and director of the Culture Ministry’s Office of Contemporary Art and Culture should take responsibility for this. The new minister should also urgently push for the opening of the Contemporary Art Museum, which has been put on hold for several years. This unfinished project near the Thailand Cultural Centre (on Ratchadaphisek Road) has become the Culture Ministry’s “monument of embarrassment”. The culture minister in Prayut’s first government failed miserably in ensuring its completion, reflecting the junta government’s ineffectiveness in areas of culture. Thailand as a cultural hub for Asean is just a hollow dream that is bound to end in failure. With this diabolical project under construction for so long, many questions need to be answered. Where has all the money gone? Why do contractors keep abandoning the project? Why are there no concrete plans for exhibitions, collections or the training of art experts? Opening soon? No way, because this year’s budget will most likely be diverted to the cultural propaganda of Prayut’s many ‘smiley’ projects. The Phalang Pracharat Party claims it will make the capital Bangkok 5.0, dividing it into nine zones for innovation with 5G technology. What do you think about this policy? Apinan: Reality check! Thailand has gone backwards to about 2.5G over the past five years. This is just another stick-and-carrot policy of hollow dreams. Wait a minute … do we really need these innovative zones, when the creative class is losing its freedom of innovative thinking? Art is being decentralised, with art spaces and interesting projects spreading across the Kingdom and reflecting its diversity. Should the government support them financially? Apinan: Yes, but this Culture Ministry will only provide financial support to specific provinces. For instance, it may perhaps consider the revival of the mega Pattaya Biennale at Bali Hai, or the annual buffalo racing contest in Chon Buri. How can the government sustain cultural development? Apinan: By not suffocating creative imagination through cultural militancy, cultural superiority and nationalistic arrogance. Source: https://www.nationthailand.com/premium/30373040 -- © Copyright The Nation Thailand 2019-07-16 Follow Thaivisa on LINE for breaking Thailand news and visa info
July 16, 20196 yr Popular Post 9 minutes ago, webfact said: How can the government sustain cultural development? Apinan: By not suffocating creative imagination through cultural militancy, cultural superiority and nationalistic arrogance. I must say, this is a rare moment when I have to agree!
July 16, 20196 yr 22 minutes ago, webfact said: The second Prayut government promises to promote Thai “purity” and “smile-a-while” campaigns What's that all about then?
July 16, 20196 yr Popular Post 6 hours ago, webfact said: What do you think the new culture minister will do to move the country forward using culture as a key tool? He'll swap his shirt in for a yellow one, and buy a new Merc !
July 16, 20196 yr Popular Post 8 hours ago, Phuketshrew said: What's that all about then? Thai purity, sure has a 1940's sound to it.
July 16, 20196 yr It seems the Khunpluem 'family' must be the most culturally gifted 'family' in Thailand, because this post has been given to at least 1 other sibling in the past, by the Thaksin government. Blatant vote buying by the Prayut clan to 'turn' former redcoat mercenaries.
July 16, 20196 yr Popular Post This chap is quite brave to speak out in the way he is doing. Yes, any culture remains lifelessly frozen in time - locked into the Jurassic era - which does not allow for questioning, debating and challenging of the old dinosaur forms, views and structures. In Thailand, especially under the junta, even university-level history lecturers have to be careful and ever vigilant (self-censoring) over how they teach such things as the egalitarianism demanded by the idealists of the French Revolution. Lecturers in literature have effectively been banned from teaching Orwell's unsurpassed political novel, Nineteen Eighty-Four. All that must change if Thailand is to become any kind of beacon of culture. Can't see it happening myself - not all the while the choking roots of the military hierarchy and their sponsors extend deep down into the oppressive and archaic Thai cultural soil ...
July 16, 20196 yr 2 hours ago, Cake Monster said: Ittipol Khunplum ! Cultural MInister Seriously ? Come on CM, he's been running the cultural center of Thailand down in Pattayaville, he is well acquainted with Thai culture.
July 17, 20196 yr On 7/16/2019 at 10:12 AM, Phuketshrew said: What's that all about then? smile with the purist of intentions
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