|
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
ARTSAn American Diary The San Jose Museum of Art presents an exhibition of works by Roger Shimomura, including American Diary: December 7, 1941 created in 1997. The exhibit runs through Jan. 7, 2001. (110 S. Market St., San Jose) Between the Thunder and the Rain This exhibit features Chinese paintings from the Opium War through the Cultural Revolution to explore the array of artistic achievements created during the many tumultuous periods that defined modern Chinese history. The 121 paintings including hanging scrolls, handscrolls, horizontal scrolls, fans and albums reveal a rich mix of works offering a complete survey of the issues, styles and personalities of the era. The exhibit runs through Jan. 14, 2001. (Asian Art Museum, Golden Gate Park, San Francisco) Bruce Lee The Chinese Culture Foundation of San Francisco and the Inosanto Academy of Martial Arts honor Bruce Lee with an exhibition of over 240 treasures, including diaries, personal letters, drawings and Lees own writings. The exhibit is on display through Feb. 18, 2001. (Chinese Culture Center of San Francisco at the Holiday Inn, 750 Kearny St., 3rd floor, San Francisco. 415-986-2825) Carmen Lomas Garza: A Retrospective On Jan. 21, 2001 Carmen Lomas Garza: A Retrospective will premiere at the San Jose Museum of Art prior to embarking on a two-year national tour. The first retrospective of this San Francisco-based artist will feature work from the mid-1970s to the present. Populated with people and highlighting events from her childhood in a rural South Texas barrio birthday festivities, faith healings, community dances and making banderitas (special occasion tissue paper cut-outs) Garzas works honor universal commonalties of family and community while remaining dedicated to her Mexican-American heritage. (110 South Market Street, San Jose. 408-271-6840. www.sjmusart.org) Chicanos en Mictlán This exhibit examines how two small community art centers, Galería de la Raza in San Francisco and Self Help Graphics in Los Angeles, introduced Day of the Dead observances to California in 1972. It is the first survey exploring the reciprocal relationship between Chicano artists and the Day of the Dead, as well as the statewide impact of the observance through art work, photography and altar installations. The showing runs through Dec. 31. (The Mexican Museum, Fort Mason Center, Bldg. D, San Francisco. 415-202-9700) Mise-en-Scéne Mise-en-scène: New LA Sculpture, an exhibition of 31 works by six up-and-coming Los Angeles artists, will open Jan. 27, 2001, in the Logan Galleries on the San Francisco campus of the California College of Arts & Crafts and will continue through March 10. Presented by the CCAC Institute, the exhibition features works in sculpture, drawing, video and film by Liz Craft, Evan Holloway, Jason Meadows, Jeff Ono, Paul Sietsema and Torbjörn Vejvi. (1111 Eighth Street, San Francisco. 415-703-9500) Secret World of the Forbidden City The Oakland Museum of California hosts ths major exhibition of more than 350 Chinese Imperial Court treasures from the Qing Dynasty through Jan. 24, 2001. (1000 Oak St., Oakland. 510-238-2200.) Supply: An Installation by Indigo Som Indigo Som, an emerging artist residing in Berkeley, will draw on the walls of the Foyer Gallery at the Sonoma Museum of Visual Art with office supplies such as scotch tape, liquid paper, highlighters, ballpoint pens, copy paper, post-it notes, as she explores the office-y feel of the space and draws on her history as an office worker. Exhibition runs Dec. 27 through Feb. 28, 2001. (SMOVA, Luther Burbank Center for the Arts, 50 Mark West Springs Road, Santa Rosa. 707-527-0297)
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA |
Gifts of Pride and Love A major nationwide traveling exhibition of Kiowa and Comanche cradles runs through Jan. 4 at the UCLA Fowler Museum of Cultural History. The show features 38 historic lattice cradles and two new cradles created for this exhibition. For more information, call 310-825-4361. (UCLA Fowler Museum, Royce Hall, Los Angeles)
Knowable Objects The ten artists in the exhibition share an involvement with the commonplace of everyday life and the possibility of transformation, impelling materials and subjects beyond their original intent. Woo Song Bang, Liza Hennessey Botkin, Liz Chilsen, Hyun Sook Cho, Connie Goldman, Judith Foosaner, Anita Getzler, Debbie Han, Kyung Joo Kim and David Spagnolo. The exhibition commemorates the 20th anniversary of the Korean Cultural Center, Los Angeles. (KCC, 5505 Wilshire Boulevard, Los Angeles. 323-936-7141)
Superflat Superflat surveys a tendency in Japanese art, animation, fashion and graphic design towards two-dimensionality through work by 19 artists. The inaugural exhibition at the MOCA Gallery at the Pacific Design Center opens Jan. 14, 2001 and remains on view through May 6, 2001. Organized by artist Takashi Murakami with MOCA, the exhibition will feature painting, photography, works on paper, video, computer animation, fashion, cartoons and sculpture by some of the most provocative artists working in Japan. (8687 Melrose Avenue, West Hollywood, Los Angeles. 213-621-2766)
The Journey: Passages of a Chinese American Joan Yen is a contemporary artist, a third generation Chinese American who attempts to retain her identity while being immersed in American society. Her bright, bold and abstracted work blends symbols, images and thoughts that reflect her ancient Chinese heritage and very modern American existence. Yens show at the Pacific Asia Museum runs through Jan. 7. For more information please call 626-449-2742 (Pacific Asia Museum, 46 N. Los Robles, Pasadena)
![]()
REST OF THE WEST
Blue-and-White Japanese Porcelain Approximately 100 pieces of exquisite Japanese porcelain will grace the gallery at the Seattle Art Museum in Hirado Porcelain of Japan from the Kurtzman Collection. The exhibition runs through July 8, 2001. Museum hours are Tuesdays through Sundays, 10 a.m.-5 p.m. and on Thursdays until 9 p.m. (1400 E. Prospect St., Volunteer Park, Seattle)
Signs of fortune, Symbols of immortality This installation of Japanese hanging scrolls, screens and textiles features works from the 17th through 20th centuries. Museum hours are Tuesdays through Sundays, 10 a.m.-5 p.m. and on Thursdays until 9 p.m. (Seattle Art Museum, 1400 E. Prospect St., Volunteer Park, Seattle)
The Art of Protest A cross-cultural exhibition of works from Seattle Asian Art Museums collection that use a wide range of media and visual imagery to make social comment, address political issues and advocate for change. For more information call 206-654-3100 (SAAM, Volunteer Park, 14th Avenue at East Prospect St.)
![]()
THE SOUTH
Oshogatsu You are invited to the Japanese New Year Celebration at The Morikami Museum and Japanese Gardens. This joyous event welcomes in 2001 with traditional Japanese activities, including rice-pounding and making of mochi rice cakes; viewing of the sado tea ceremony; kakizome, the writing of New Years resolutions; hanetsuki, which is similar to badminton. The event will take place on Jan. 6 from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. For more information call 561-495-0233. (Morikami Museum and Japanese Gardens, 4000 Morikami Park Rd, Delray Beach, Florida.)
![]()
THE MIDWEST
Canceled: Exhibiting Experimental Art in China Canceled highlights Father and Son in Ancestral Temple, a video installation by Song Dong that was included in a 1988 exhibit canceled by the Chinese government just prior to its opening, and also showing a video by Wu Wenguang that documents the shows closing, through Jan. 7. (David and Alfred Smart Museum of Art, University of Chicago, 5550 S. Greenwood St., Chicago. 773-702-0200. smartmuseum.uchicago.edu)
Taoism and the Arts of China This exhibition at the Art Institute of Chicago is the first ever devoted to Taoism. Show runs through Jan. 7, 2001. (Art Institute of Chicago, Michigan Avenue, Chicago. 312-443-3600. www.artic.edu)
![]()
EAST COAST
Can We Feed Ourselves For more than 20 years Hiroji Kubota has traveled and photographed the countries and cultures of Asia, continually finding compelling evidence that Asia is facing an imminent crisis of food production, population explosion and environmental destruction. Opening on Jan. 31, the Asia Society presents an exhibition Kubotas photographs. Can We Feed Ourselves? A Focus on Asia: Photographs by Hiroji Kubata will be on view at the Asia Society at Midtown, 502 Park Avenue, New York City. For more information call 212-288-6400 or go to www.asiasociety.org.
Car Pooling from L.A. Cities like Los Angeles are the epicenters of great social laboratories where hybrid cultures are born. Six LA artists present their social commentary through different media. Susan Choi, Dean Sameshima, Kyungmi Shin, Tam Van Tran, T. Kim-Trang Tran and Shirley Tse show their work at the Asian American Arts Center through Dec. 30. For gallery hours call 212-233-2154. (26 Bowery Street, New York City)
Korean War in American Art & Culture: Fifty Years Later An exhibition at Guild Hall through Jan. 7 2001. (Guild Hall of East Hampton, 158 Main Street, East Hampton. 631-324-0806. www.guildhall.org)
Power and Desire The cultural richness, visual brilliance and story-telling power of Indian court painting between the 16th and 19th centuries will be revealed in this exhibition that runs through Jan. 7, 2001. The art work comes from the San Diego Museum of Art, Edwin Binney 3rd Collection, considered one of the most important collections of South Asian painting in the United States. For more information, call 212-288-6400. (Asia Society, 725 Park Ave., New York City.)
Quintessentials Small boxed objects by Mette Bowen and wall sculptures by Noriko Sakanishi. Exhibition runs through Dec. 30 at M.Y. Art Prospects, 135 West 29th Street, 10th floor, New York City. For further information contact Miyako Yoshinaga at 212-268-7132 or MYartpro@aol.com.
Tong Zhi/Comrade: Out in Asia America The first one-person exhibition by New York-based, Hong Kong-born artist Ken Chu. Chu has a fascinating background of travel and activism. Tong Chi/Comrade brings the discourse of sexual orientation into our communities, and looks at what might be a safe public space for Asian Americans in Chinatowns, Koreatowns, Manilatowns, Little Tokyos, Little Saigons and Little Bombays across the country. Exhibition runs through April 14, 2001. (Museum of Chinese Americas, 70 Mulberry Street, 2nd Floor, New York.)
Worlds Revealed The dawn of Japanese and American cultural exchange is charted in this exhibition that showcases more than 200 artworks, cultural objects and documents dating from as early as 1800 when the Salem ships began making trips to Nagasaki and bringing back beautiful arts and crafts. The exhibition runs through March 17, 2001 at the Peabody Essex Museum. (East India Square, Salem, Mass. 978-745-9500)
Juilliards Pre-Collage Division Presents On Saturday, Dec. 23 at 5 p.m., Ki-Sun Sung conducts the Pre-College Chamber Orchestra in works by Bach, Corigliano and Tchaikovsky, followed by a performance at 8 p.m. featuring the Pre-College Symphony led by Adam Glaser with a program including works by Britten, Mendelssohn and Borodin. Free tickets can be obtained from the Juilliard Box Office beginning Dec. 8. (60 Lincoln Center Plaza, New York City. 769-7406)
My Mom Across America written and performed by Tina Lee, and Bruce lee: inside the lost interview performed and created by Soomi Kim. Through Dec. 30 Thursday - Saturday at 7 p.m. at the Nuyorican Poets Cafe. (236 E. 3rd St. 212-726-8404)
Princess Turandot Sparks fly when a captivating prince meets a decapitated princess in this fast and furious romp about the restorative power of love. Part of the Blue Light Theater Companys 2000-2001 season, Princess Turandot is a holiday event for all ages. For tickets call Smarttix at 212-206-1515. (McGinn/Cazale Theater, Broadway on 76th, New York City.)
The House of Bernarda Alba This play by Frederico Garcia Lorca is adapted and directed by Chay Yew. Presented by the National Asian American Theater Company. Through Dec 23, Monday - Saturday at 7 p.m. Saturday matinee at 2 p.m. (508 W. 53rd St. New York City. 718-623-1672)
Send an E-Mail to Our Calendar Editor
![]()
![]()
![]()
Feature | National | Bay Area | Business | Arts & Entertainment | Opinion