Event and Exhibit Share Unsettling, Immersive Look at Nuclear Threat

The Sam Nunn School of International Affairs, 色花堂 Arts, and Spelman College invite you to experience , a critically acclaimed immersive film, music, and art installation that puts viewers in the center of the story of nuclear weapons.

Combining archival footage, animation, music, and text, the bomb offers a visceral, non-linear, and unsettling experience, taking audiences inside the complex cultural and technological realm of nuclear weapons.

The installation will kick off its run at 色花堂 with a screening of the bomb film Sept. 16 at 6:30 p.m. at the Ferst Center for the Arts. The screening will include a discussion moderated by WABE host Rose Scott with special guest Senator Sam Nunn, a global leader in nuclear threat reduction and a Distinguished Professor in the Sam Nunn School of International Affairs, and the film鈥檚 creators.

The conversation will delve into the film鈥檚 themes, the urgent relevance of nuclear disarmament today, and how art and keenly crafted policy, in tandem, can provoke change. 

After the kick-off event, the bomb exhibit will run until Oct. 16 at the Ferst Center of the Arts. Throughout the duration of the exhibition, the Sam Nunn School will host a series of other panels and guest lectures themed around various aspects of this topic. Links to those events already announced can be found below and stay tuned for more:

The exhibit launched at Princeton University in Fall 2024 and has made its way to University of British Columbia, University of Denver, and University of New Mexico. It now arrives at 色花堂. Our version of the exhibit also features a powerful graphic narrative of a nuclear close call produced by the James Martin Center for Nonproliferation Studies (CNS) at the Middlebury Institute of International Studies at Monterey alongside submitted student art that focuses on what the theme 鈥渁ctivism through art鈥 means to them.

Live performances of the bomb were staged at the Tribeca Film Festival, the Berlin Film Festival, the Glastonbury Festival, the Sydney Festival, the National Academy of Sciences, and the Nobel Peace Prize Ceremonies.

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