Chiang Mai Social Installation

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The Chiang Mai Social Installation (CSMI) or Chiang Mai Jat Wang Sang Khom,[1] was an art project and festival series founded by Mit Jai Inn, Uthit Atimana, Montien Boonma and Araya Rasjarmrearnsook.[2] The festivals brought arts — particularly installation and performance works — out of traditional and commercial venues and into the streets and non-traditional venues of Chiang Mai, Thailand.[3] The works were often live or otherwise ephemeral in nature, and never given market value.[4]

The Chiang Mai Social Installation was founded in 1992 by a group of artists and friends in Chiang Mai, Thailand. Uthit Atimana was an artist and lecturer at Chiang Mai University's Fine Arts Faculty; Mit Jai Inn was an assistant to Austrian artist Franz West, and who had recently returned to his hometown of Chiang Mai.[5]

Founded on an ethos of friendship, the project epitomised some regional specificities, such as an emphasis on ephemerality and sociality. The interventions presented a self-funded, anarchic alternative to Southeast Asia's subsequently expanding biennial culture.[6] Participating artist Arahmaiani who was based in Thailand after receiving death threats in Indonesia for her progressive views expressed that it was "important that we, as an artistic community, could support each other so that everyone could express themselves...I just felt there was a kind of freedom there at that time." Arahmaiani and several other CMSI participating artists also took part in an important festival growing in parallel Womanifesto.[4]

Festivals

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References

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