"The exhibition has been postponed now instead of being cancelled, but ticket purchasers can get a refund on Damai ," Wenyu, a Chinese fan of the musician who talked to Damai customer service, told the Global Times on Monday.
He expressed his condolences to the deceased and his family, and commented that he believes the museum's response to the accident is sincere.īut hundreds of Chinese netizens commenting under the post said they disapproved of the musician's take, saying that he should not cooperate with the museum anymore. "This incident came as a great shock to me during the recovery of my illness," Sakamoto wrote in English. The musician also posted about the accident on Sina Weibo on Saturday, saying that he was "extremely pained about the fatal accident" that occurred at the museum.
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The owners of the museum said they have contacted the family of the deceased and are working with them concerning compensation and how to help them, the article noted. It was this overhanging section that collapsed, leading to the accident. Other staff on scene called an emergency center, but responders were unable to save the worker.Īccording to pictures posted by media, the room was located on the roof of the museum, but a small section of it hung over the lip of the roof.
The statement said that the worker was in a machine room on top of the building of the museum on Tuesday, when a portion of the floor in the room gave way, leading the man to fall two stories down. On Saturday, the official Sina Weibo account for Beijing's MWoods Art Museum published a statement about the "accident." In each exhibition hall, the musician and his collaborators have created environments for visitors to experience and share music and sound, according to the exhibition's introduction.Ī new opening date has not yet been announced. The exhibition was co-arranged by Chinese and Japanese artists to debut almost all of Sakamoto's sound installation works in the Chinese mainland for the first time ever. The largest solo exhibition of Japanese musician Ryuichi Sakamoto, who has won multiple awards including Oscars and Grammys, was originally set to open at a Chinese art museum on Monday, but the opening was postponed on Sunday after a worker died in an accident.