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ANNOUNCEMENTS
The Media Fund The National Asian American Telecommunications Association (NAATA) is pleased to announce new deadlines for the Media Fund. Open Call for Production Funds has a deadline on Aug. 24. This round of funding is for applicants with public television projects in production and/or post-production phases. Projects in research and development or script development phases need not apply. Awards will average $20,000 to $50,000. Exceptions may be made. Open Door Completion Fund has no deadline. This round of funding is for applicants with public television projects in the final post-production phase. A full-length rough cut must be submitted. Awards average $20,000 and NAATA funds must be the last monies needed to finish the project and deliver the broadcast master. For more information, check out www.naatanet.org or contact the Media Fund department at 415-863-0814 x 106 or mediafund@naatanet.org.
ARTS
Art With Elders The Tenth Annual Art With Elders Exhibit, which opened with great success last September at the M.H. de Young Memorial Museum features 90 paintings by AWE artists and the photography of Francis da Silva. The show is currently touring San Francisco and will be located for four weeks, through March 9, in the lobby of 201 Spear Street near Folsom. The public may view the exhibit Monday through Saturday from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. For more information on Art With Elders, visit www.sfmnh.org.
Atlas(t) Reviving the decades-long history of collaboration between Galería de la Raza and Kearny Street Workshop, the two organizations younger members collaborates on an exhibition entitled atlas(t): a mapping expedition/exhibition by Latino and Asian Pacific American Artists. The exhibition is a conceptual atlas comprised of over two dozen maps that demonstrate the imaginative range of the Bay Areas young Latino and Asian American artists. The show runs through March 31. Dont miss the performance on March 31 at 8 p.m. For more information, please call Gigi Otalvaro of Galería at 415-826-8009 or Claire Light of KSW at 415-503-0520 (Galería de la Raza, 2857 24th Street, San Francisco).
Backstage/Frontstage Backstage/Frontstage is the Yerba Buena Center for the Arts Preparators Show. Artists featured include: Cesar Barragan, Vincente Contreras, Gina Osterloh, Michael Arcega, Jen Hing, Tara Daly, Chris the freak Hill, James Kang and RE Sanchez. The opening reception is March 2, 8 p.m. to midnight. The show runs through March 11, brought to you by Cesar Barragan, RE Sanchez and who loves ya.inc. For more information, please call 415-920-0896. (Balazo/Mission Badlands Gallery, 2811 Mission St. @ 24th St., San Francisco.)
Euphorium For those with an adventurous spirit, check out Antennas virtual opium trip, The Euphorium is playing through March 10 at Building 920 in the Presidio. Antenna Direction Chris Hardman has turned this Crissy Field warehouse into a surreal, walk-through dreamscape using Antennas signature headsets, digital audio effects, three dimensional paintings, and a few Coney Island funhouse tricks thrown in for good measure. Based on Samuel Taylor Coleridges opium-induced poem Kubla Khan. Doors are open 7 p.m. -10 p.m. Wednesdays and Thursdays, 7 p.m. - midnight Fridays and Saturdays, 3 - 7 p.m. Sundays. Admission is $15 general, $12 for students and seniors. One person enters every two minutes, so reservations are recommended. Call 415-332-9454. For more information, check out www.antenna-theater.org.
Get Out of Camp Produced by the National Japanese American Historical Society, this interactive exhibit gives the audience an experiential overview of what World War II was like for Japanese Americans with replicas and photographs and music. The exhibition is on display through July 31, and is free and open to the public. Gallery hours are Mondays through Fridays, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. (NJAHS Gallery, 1684 Post St., San Francisco. 415-921-5007.)
Hiroshi Sugimoto Known for long-exposure photographic series of empty movie theaters and drive-ins, seascapes and museum dioramas, Sugimoto has now turned his attention to 20th-century architecture for works that will be displayed at the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art through March 4. (151 3rd St., San Francisco. 415-357-4000).
Live Forever Korean Artist Lee Bul will show a new body of work, Live Forever: New Work by Lee Bul, that expands upon her investigation of the body in a technologically-mediated society. Related to the 1999 Venice Biennale installation of karaoke booths, Lee will fabricate a new series of pod-shaped karaoke capsules produced at the Fabric Workshop and Museum in Philadelphia. In San Francisco Lee will produce a new video work which explores her interest in lounge bands that inhabit that strange nomadic realm of hotels. The video Live Forever will be exhibited with the complete series of video productions Amateurs + Anthem + Live Forever. Finally, with a commitment to the process of art-making and with commissioning new work, the Art Institute will exhibit an extensive body of drawings sketches of the project in progress. The show will run from April 5 to May 19, with an opening reception on April 5, from 5:30 to 7:30 p.m., at the Walter & McBean Galleries, San Francisco Art Institute, 800 Chestnut Street, San Francisco. Visit www.sfai.edu for complete exhibition and public program information.
Mise-en-scène Mise-en-scène: New LA Sculpture, an exhibition of 31 works by six up-and-coming Los Angeles artists is currently 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.)
Seeing Time March 17 through April 14, Washington Square announces a new exhibition, Seeing Time, that pairs two Bay Area artists whose work is deeply rooted in West Coast culture and images. Yeung Has new series of monotype prints records the first year of the new millennium through a visual diary. Suzan Friedland combines the techniques of textile work, painting and pottery in her artwork. Her forms are derived from the natural landscape of northern California, where she lives. Washington Square Gallery is located at 1821 Powell Street between Filbert and Greenwich Streets, For more information, please call Hilary Snow at 415-291-9255.
Taoism and the Arts of China This exhibition explores one of Chinas primary indigenous philosophies and religions, an understanding of which is critical to comprehending Chinese culture, both historically and today. Approximately 150 works of art will be used to explore conceptual and artistic achievements in the history of Taoism, including paintings, sculpture, calligraphy, textiles, ritual objects and rare books borrowed from nearly seventy lenders in over ten countries. Significantly, 33 works will be borrowed from institutions in the Peoples Republic of China, only two of which have been previously exhibited in the West. The show runs through May 31. For museum hours and general information, call 415-379-8800 or go to www.asianart.org. (Asian Art Museum of San Francisco, Golden Gate Park, San Francisco).
DANCE
Diablo Ballet Celebrates 7th Anniversary Artistic Director Lauren Jonas announces Diablo Ballets Seventh Anniversary Celebration Performances on March 16 and 17 at the Dean Lesher Regional Center for the Arts in Walnut Creek. Fresh from well-received performances at Zellerbach Hall, the company performs its premiere of Balanchines Who Cares?, two World Premieres and the repeat of Val Caniparolis critically acclaimed Open Veins. For tickets, call 925-943-7469. Individual tickets range from $30 to $35, and student, senior and group discounts are available. The Dean Lesher Regional Center for the Arts is located in downtown Walnut Creek at 1601 Civic Drive.
The Nature of Nature Facing East Dance & Music (FEDM), an all Asian American female dance company combining modern dance with an Asian aesthetic and live music, announces the premier of The Nature of Nature. With five Chinese elements (Wood, Fire, Earth, Metal, Water), five dance soloists and five musicians, The Nature of Nature features Li-Jues visually breath-taking choreography; original music composed and performed live by Somei Yoshino Taiko Ensemble; thought-provoking text written by Associate Director Vivien Dai; sculptural set designs by set designer Richard Jue; and provocative costumes by haute couture designer Colleen Quen. Performances are March 16-17 and 23-24 at 8 p.m. and March 25 at 3p.m. All performances are located at the Asia Pacific Cultural Center (formerly Oakland Asian Cultural Center) in Oaklands Chinatown (9th St. and Webster/12th St. BART Station). Tickets are $20 in advance and $22 at the door with $5 discounts for students and seniors, and half price for children under 12. To purchase tickets by phone, call the Asia Pacific Cultural Center Box Office at 510-208-6080. For more information, call 510-891-9496 or visit www.fedm.org.
Russian Hamlet: The Son of Catherine the Great Eifman Ballet of St. Petersburg, critically acclaimed as Russias most innovative contemporary dance company, returns to the Bay Area with Boris Eifmans lavish new masterpiece, Russian Hamlet: The Son of Catherine the Great. In Russian Hamlet, Eifman takes a piercing look into the tragic life of Prince Paul (Pavel Pekovich) and casts new light on one of the most complex and fascinating figures in Russian history. Paul I was born in 1754 to Peter III and Catherine the Great. At the age of eight, he witnessed his fathers murder by the order of his mother, who then became the Empress of All Russia. Five performances are scheduled March 29 - April 1 in San Francisco at the Palace of Fine Arts Theatre. Tickets now on sale, call 415-392-4400.
EVENTS
Godzilla West Presents: Friday Night Live Godzilla West presents Friday Night Live, a fresh new open-mike venue, which will feature Asian Pacific Islander monologue artists and comedians, as well as spoken word artists, musicians and dancers. The vision is to create a nurturing space where artists of any medium can come to express and create. The open mike will take place on the first Friday of every month at the Oakland Asian Cultural Center. For more information, call 510-208-6080. (388 9th Street, Suite 290, Oakland.)
FILM
Families Under the Influence As part of the Women of Color Film Festival, the Pacific Film Archive presents a program that explores the myriad ways in which society has shaped the family and how individuals are transformed by the families they choose to identify with. Lili Mariyes The Shangri-La Cafe illustrates a mothers courageous decision that deeply affects her daughter, and provides a rare glimpse into Asian and black relations in the late 1950s. Dolissa Medinas experimental documentary Grounds is a meditation on the recovery of lost family history and the organic texture of migratory memory. The struggles to comprehend the choices made by the father in an impoverished family is hauntingly depicted in Joy Dietrichs Surplus. A senile lady crosses paths with a hysterical woman in Veena Suds One Night, a gripping story of trust that explores how two loners become each others family for one night. In Subrosa, a young woman searches for clues to why her mother gave her up for adoption. Filmmaker Helen Lee lyrically reminds us that to know your family is to come closer to knowing yourself. This program of short films begins at 7:30 p.m. and runs 85 minutes long. PFA Theater, 2575 Bancroft Way at Bowditch St, Berkeley.
MUSIC
Other Minds Festival VII Other Minds, dedicated to new and unusual music in all its forms, brings the latest ideas and trends in new music to the Bay Area this spring with Other Minds Festival VII. The festival is a rare opportunity to hear works by great musical innovators from around the world and the Bay Area. The 2001 festival program spans nearly a century of music invention, highlighting some early roots of new music and presenting four world premiere performances. The festival will bring together invited composers for private sessions at the Djerassi Resident Artists Program in Woodside, March 3-6. The festival then moves to San Francisco for public events that include artist forums, and three evenings of concerts at Cowell Theater, Fort Mason, March 8-10. Featured artists include: Alvin Curran (Oakland/Rome); Andrew Hill (New York); Hi Kyung Kim (Santa Cruz, born Korea); Aleksandra Vrebalov (Ann Arbor, born former Yugoslavia). For more information, please call Other Minds at 415-934-8134.
Suzanne Teng & Mystic Journey Award-winning contemporary world music band Suzanne Teng & Mystic Journey will present their grand Bay Area homecoming concert on Saturday, March 10, at 8 p.m. at the Julia Morgan Center for the Arts located at 2640 College Avenue. Original compositions feature Berkeley native Teng on flutes from around the world, Gilbert Levy on world percussion, Fritz Heede on sitar, Turkish saz and guitar, and Barry Newton on string bass. They are joined by special guest artists Prince Diabate, a master kora player from Guinea West Africa, and Bay Area locals Mark and Elisabeth Bell on Middle Eastern drums and wind instruments. General tickets are $15, and $10 tickets for students and seniors available through CBON 925-798-1300. For more information, call 310-859-5846, 510-845-8542 or go to www.suzanneteng.com.
Violinist Kyung-Wha Chung to Perform Kyung-Wha Chung returns to San Francisco on Monday, March 12 at 8 p.m. for the first time since 1994, for a Davies Hall recital in San Francisco Performances Virtuosi Series. Accompanied by pianist Itamar Golan, Chung performs Stravinskys Duo Concertanto for Violin and Piano, Georges Enescus Sonata No.3 for Violin and Piano in A minor, Op. 25, Prokofievs Violin Sonata No. 1 in F minor, and Op. 80 and Op. 6 of Rachmaninoff. Tickets for Kyung-Wha Chungs recital range from $15 to $63 and are available at City Box Office, 180 Redwood Street, Suite 100, or by phone at 415-392-4400. Tickets can also be purchased online at www.SFPerforming.org. Half-price tickets for students and senior citizens are sold at the theater on the day of the performance, subject to availability. (Davies Symphony Hall, Grove Street, San Francisco.)
READINGS AND LECTURES
Five Bamboo Ridge Writers Bamboo Ridge publishes literature which nurtures the voices of Hawaii and celebrates its literary tradition. It currently publishes two volumes a year: a literary journal of poetry and fiction featuring work by both emerging and established writers; and a book or anthology focused on a special theme. Five authors Jacquelyn Kim, Kimiko Guthrie-Kupers, Lia Smith, Eileen Tablos and Sabrena Taylor will read their poetry, prose and essays on Sunday, March 4 at 4 p.m., at Eastwind Books of Berkeley. (2066 University Avenue, Berkeley. 510-548-2350).
International Womens Day Book Party Celebrate International Womens Day at a book party for the new edition of The Radical Women Manifesto: Socialist Feminist Theory, Program and Organizational Structure. Featuring commentary by labor movement organizer Nancy Reiko Kato and readings from the book. On March 11, the program begins at 2 p.m. International appetizer buffet served throughout for a $7 donation. New Valencia Hall, 1908 Mission Street (near 16th St. BART), San Francisco. Sponsored by Radical Women. Call 415-864-1278 for more information.
Writers on Writing with Ruthanne Lum McCunn Raised in Hong Kong and now residing in San Francisco, Ruthanne Lum McCunn has published seven books on the experience of Chinese people in America, including the classic Thousand Pieces of Gold, Sole Survivor, and Wooden Fish Songs. In The Moon Pearl, McCunns first novel in five years, the best-selling author once again explores the world of 19th-century women who defy tradition. The reading is funded by the Lila Wallace-Readers Digest Fund, with support from the Friends & Foundation of the San Francisco Public Library, on March 11 at the lower level of the Main Library, in the Latino/Hispanic Community Meeting Room-B, 1 p.m. - 4 p.m. More information on Library Programs can be found at http://sfpl.org.
THEATER
Aliens in America Aliens in America is a one-woman show performed by public radio commentator, humorist and fiction writer, Sandra Tsing Loh. Loh takes us on a hilarious journey of growing up in America as the daughter of a Chinese father and German mother, with side trips into an Ethiopian vacation and mail-order brides. Location: San Jose Repertory Theater. Through March 4. Times: Tuesday - Friday at 8 p.m., Saturday at 3 & 8 p.m., Sunday at 2 & 7 p.m. Admission: $17 - $35 admission. For more information, http://www.sfstation.com/theatre/sanjoserep#aliens.
Café Depresso Café Depresso, a new dark comedy by Tom Vegh, follows four San Franciscans, in group therapy for depression, as they encounter an onslaught of change and surprises when two group members disappear. Performances are scheduled for Fridays and Saturdays at 8 p.m. through March 3 at Exit Theater in San Francisco. For reservations, please call 415-776-7427. Check out the Web site at www.cafedepresso.com. (Exit Theater, 156 Eddy St., San Francisco).
Contagion: An American Book of the Dead Campo Santo + Intersection with Alma Delfina Group present the World Premiere of John Stepplings Contagion: an american book of the dead through March 11 at the Intersection. Contagion is directed by Sean San José and features Michael Cheng, Nina Gold, Comika Griffin, Steve Marvel, Luis Saguar, Machiko Saito and Paul Santiago, designed by Temple Crocker, Annie Kunjappy, Alex Nichols, Tom Ontiveros and Drew Yerys. Music by Scheheradze Stone and choreography by Emiko Lewis. In Contagion, seven people who have lived lives of deception, prostitution, pornography and drug abuse struggle from the shadows to put their pasts in order. These are ghostlike people who dwell in the marginal, but very real, places in this world; American expatriates who travel farther and farther from home to China, Pakistan, Africa and beyond in order to get closer to their own histories. In the end, only one persons story will survive. For tickets and information, please call 415-626-3311. (Intersection, 446 Valencia St., San Francisco)
Getting Out A young woman, with a lifetime of mistakes and disadvantages behind her, comes home after serving an eight-year prison sentence. Getting Out tells the story of her first 24 hours in the outside world, as she wrestles with her past and the emotional and physical threats that challenge her first true liberation. Marsha Normans award-winning and innovative play asks important questions about crime and punishment and the powerful impact they can have on a young identity. Directed by Margo Whitcomb, the play will preview at Il Teatro 450, 449 Powell Street, San Francisco, on March 2 and run through March 25, every Friday and Saturday at 8 p.m. and Sunday at 7 p.m. General admission is $18, students $15. For more information and reservations, call 415-433-1172.
KINs Sixth Annual Home Season This year, KIN will premiere Robert Moses works: Dirt Roads and Back Doors, Image Bank and a third yet-untitled piece. The Sixth Annual Home Season of Robert Moses KIN will be performed through March 4 at the Cowell Theater at Fort Mason Center, and March 9-11 at the Gershwin Theater, located at 2350 Turk Boulevard on the University of San Francisco campus. Performances are 8 p.m. nightly, with a 2 p.m. matinee on March 4 and 11. Ticket prices range from $14.50 to $18.50. For more information and to charge tickets by phone, call 415-441-3687.
Stop Kiss A work that manages to be both funny and provocative, Stop Kiss tells the story of Sara and Callie, two straight girls in their late twenties who are the last to realize they are falling in love. When their first tentative kiss provokes an act of violence, their worlds are turned upside down. Location: Brava! For Women in the Arts. Dates: Through Sunday, March 11. Times: Wednesday - Sunday at 8 p.m. Admission: $12 for previews; $18 - $24 on Wednesday; $18 - $26 on Thursday & Sunday; $20 - $30 on Friday & Saturday. For more information, go to http://www.sfstation.com/theatre/brava.htm#kiss.
Theater Artaud The forecast for Theater Artauds winter 2001 season calls for gusts of powerful artistry, chilling emotionalism and hot world premieres. The forefront of the performing arts will storm through San Franciscos best performance space through March 24 with artists Karen Finley, Company Chaddick, Paul Dresher with Rinde Eckert and Kim Epifano. From the icy reality of Below Zero to the sweet stickiness of Shut Up and Love Me, unexpected shifts in tempo and temperature make the stage a wildly unpredictable gathering point for this heat wave of creativity. For ticket information call 415-621-7797 or visit www.theaterartaud.org.
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ARTS
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 are all part of the exhibition that commemorates the 20th anniversary of the Korean Cultural Center, Los Angeles. (KCC, 5505 Wilshire Boulevard, Los Angeles. 323-936-7141).
More Than a Game The Japanese American National Museum presents this ongoing exhibit that tells the story of an immigrant groups journey in America through the universal theme of sport, using artifacts such as team uniforms, photographs, news clippings, interactive kiosks and videos. (Japanese American National Museum, 369 East First St., Los Angeles. 213-625-0414.)
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 remains on view through May 6. 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).
EVENTS
Dinners with Authors on Asia Pacific Asia Museum is honored to host 18 intriguing authors at the Dinners with Authors on Asia Series. Enjoy scintillating conversation with a notable author and a sumptuous meal in appealing surroundings on Sunday, March 18. The event begins with an afternoon cocktail reception in Pacific Asia Museums Chinese Courtyard Garden. Later that same evening, the affair continues with individual dinners hosted in eighteen private homes. Featured authors include: Aimee E. Liu, Dr. Elizabeth Wayland Barber, Mediha Saliba, Angi Ma Wong, Theodora Lau, Stanley A. Wolpert, Ed Reingold, Roxanna M. Brown, Dale Furutani, Michael Foster, Romulus Hillsborough, Duong Van Mai Elliot, Pamela Logan, Adeline Yeh Mah, Paul and Elaine Lewis, Ed Rothfarb and Frank Chin. For further information, contact Special Events at 626-449-2742 x 12.
MUSIC
Piano Recital, Ming June Zhao The Santa Monica College of Music Department will present an eclectic mix of concerts. Winner of the Music Teachers Association Concerto Competition, Zhao will perform the music of Liszt, Mussorgsky and Strauss. This show is free. All performances are in the SMC Concert Hall, 190 Pico Blvd, Santa Monica. For more information, please call 310-434-3000 or 310-434-4323.
THEATER
Boba Stories hereandnow, nationally-touring Asian American theater company, rediscovers itself with Boba Stories: Tales from the hereandnow Kitchen The show is a collection of vignettes incorporating storytelling, poetry, dance, video, and music. The show runs through March 4. The closing night performance at 7:30 p.m. at the Edison Performing Arts Center at East Los Angeles College, 1301 Avenida Cesar Chavez, Monterey Park. For reservations, please call 213-628-7018.
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ARTS
Blue-and-White Japanese Porcelain Approximately 100 pieces of exquisite Japanese porcelain grace the gallery at the Seattle Art Museum in Hirado Porcelain of Japan from the Kurtzman Collection. The exhibition runs through July 8. Museum hours are Tuesdays through Sundays, 10 a.m. to 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. to 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.)
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| EAST COAST |
ARTS
South Asian Womens Creative Collective Call for Submissions: South Asian Womens Creative Collectives 4th annual visual art show to be held at BosePacia Modern May1 to June 1, 2001. Deadline: March 1. Works submitted should preferably not have been shown in similar venues in NYC. Submissions in any of the following genres are acceptable: paintings, prints, photography, installation, video/film stills, sculpture, drawing, design, Web-based work, film/video. Collaborative works are welcome, as long as the person submitting the work is a South Asian woman. Submission should include: 1) a 50-100 word biographical statement; 2) resume detailing exhibition history; 3) no more than one page describing the work; 4) 5-10 reproduction-quality slides in an 8 1/2 x 11 plastic slide sheet. Work must be labeled with name, title, date, medium and dimensions of work on slide, or including a slide list with packet. Slides must indicate artists principle interest/project. Please put name and phone number on the slide sheet. You may also send a cued/labeled VHS cassette of documentation of work, if applicable. South Asian Womens Creative Collective, c/o AAWW, 16 East 32 Street, Suite 10A, New York, NY 10001. For more information, e-mail sawcc@juno.com.
Third World Newsreel Applications are now available for the 2001 Film & Video Production Workshop at Third World Newsreel. An application and general information about the Workshop are available on the Web site www.twn.org under Artist Services. If you have any questions, call 212-947-9277 x 301 or email twn@twn.org.
ARTS
2 Generations, 1 American 2 Generations, 1 American is the first solo show by New York-based, emerging artist Julia Cowing. The exhibit consists of ten color photographs of a Chinese mother and her American daughter. Images express the relationships tension and chasm. Diptychs explore the divided nature of being from two different cultures. Julia Cowing works and lives in New York, and is Chinese American. Exhibition runs through March 2, 2001. For more information, call 212-228-9910 (Zefer Gallery, 622 Broadway, 5th fl, New York City. Gallery hours by appointment only).
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 of 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.
Celebration of the First Decade Dai Ichi Arts, Ltd. is please to announce an exhibition and sale titled Celebration of the First Decade - Ceramic Art by Japanese & Americans at the 24 West 57th Street, suite 607. This exhibition premiers on March 17 through April 14. The carefully selected works are mostly in the orbit of tea ceremony, from the Six Ancient Kiln sites of Japan, and of Chinese and Korean cultural legacy. Dai Ichi Arts also discovers American talents, who create wonders in the same aesthetic and value with quintessential American spirit. For more information, please call 212-262-2330.
Living Heritage From now until June 10, China Institute presents Living Heritage: Vernacular Environment in China. Originating in Hong Kong, this exhibition features photographs, furniture and architectural components depicting the living environments from different regions of China. The Chinese house is viewed as a microcosm of Chinese society, representing its organization, economy, technology, traditions, beliefs and aspirations. (China Institute, 125 East 65th Street, New York City. 212-744-8181. www.chinainstitute.org)
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 Zhi/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 at the Peabody Essex Museum. (East India Square, Salem, Mass. 978-745-9500)
MUSIC
Akiko Yano Akiko Yano is one of the most famous people you have never heard of. She has recorded with many of the worlds great musicians, and has been a major star in Japan since she was 21. Born in Tokyo in 1955, Akiko quit school at 18 when she ascended to the top ranks of Japans studio musicians as a pianist and synthesizer player. At 21, she released her debut CD Japanese Girl, largely recorded in L.A. with her fans Lowell George and Little Feat. She began a collaboration with Yellow Magic Orchestra, who played on her next recording, and joined them on their worldwide tours. Yano has continued to collaborate with some of the worlds most renowned musicians: Thomas Dolby, and Pat Metheny and The Chieftains. Nonesuch Records has released three CDs internationally - Akiko Yano, Love Life, and Piano Nightly. She now lives in the U.S. and is an artist with Epic/Sony records. Yano will be opening her American tour at Joes Pub, 425 Lafayette St, New York City, on Thursday, March 15 at 8:30 p.m. Tickets are $25. Please call 212-539-8778 for reservations.
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