Tsunami painting
Yuko Shimizu
Format
In person
Venue

Palais des Nations, Serpent Bar
 

Date

Time

17:15 - 19:00 CEST

About

Commemorating the 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami, 20 years on.

On 26 December 2004, an earthquake in the Indian Ocean caused a devastating tsunami that killed around 230,000 people in 14 countries. It remains one of the deadliest disasters in recent human history.

The people who lived through this tragedy are forever changed by it. That is why this year, World Tsunami Awareness Day (WTAD) is honouring the memory of the Indian Ocean Tsunami on its 20th anniversary and highlighting major advances on protecting people since.

This exhibition tells the powerful accounts of tsunami survivors alongside contemporary artworks that capture the sea change of perspective that the aftermath brought, with unprecedented global collaboration on disaster resilience. Everyone must be tsunami ready - recognise the warning signs, be protected by early warning systems and be able to act quickly and get to high ground. We must have resilient infrastructure so livelihoods are not destroyed and build back better when tsunamis hit.

Tsunamis are rare but the deadliest of all natural hazards. Ensuring every person is ready in case one strikes is the central objective of this exhibition co-organised by the United Nations Offi ce for Disaster Risk Reduction and the Intergovernmental Oceanographic Commission of UNESCO. World Tsunami Awareness Day is kindly supported by the government of Japan.

The exhibition is launched in 4 locations:

  • Manila, Philippines (Mall of Asia, Music Hall) 14 Oct for 1 week,
  • Paris, France (UNESCO HQ fences) 16 October for 6 months,
  • Geneva, Switzerland (Palais des Nations, Bar Serpent) 4 November for 2 weeks,
  • New York, USA (UN HQ) 4 November for 2 weeks

Geneva Exhibition Launch Reception, 4 November 2024

Programme

17:15 - 17:35 Opening remarks:

- Mr. Kamal Kishore, Special Representative of the Secretary-General for Disaster Risk Reduction

- Representative of the UNESCO IOC

- H.E. Ms. Himalee Subhashini Arunatilaka, Ambassador of the Democratic Socialist Republic of Sri Lanka

- H.E. Mr. Oike Atsuyuki, Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary of Japan

17:35 - 17:45 Remarks from the exhibition team:

Ms. Hannah Entwisle Chapuisat,

Exhibition Art Curator

17:45 - 17:50 Special Guest:

Ms. Katrina Kremer, Assistant Professor, Institute of

Geological Sciences, University of Bern

17:50 - 19:00 Art Tour and Reception

Attachments

Tsunami: Sea Change for Resilience exhibition flyer 0.3 MB, PDF, English

Document links last validated on: 16 October 2024

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