Showing posts with label Japanese Arts. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Japanese Arts. Show all posts
Wednesday, April 14, 2010
展示 Japan's Early Ambassadors Exhibit in San Francisco!
A new exhibition commemorating the 150th anniversary of the visit by the Shogun's Delegation aboard the Kanrin Maru will be taking place May 4th through November 21st 2010 at the Asian Art Museum in San Francisco. This also takes place while the Kanrin Maru II will be visiting San Francisco May 5th to May 9th at Pier 27. Tours of the Kanrin Maru will be open to the public on Saturday the 8th from 1PM to 4PM.
If you do make it up there, be sure to also go to Pier 9 in the Embacadero to see the commemorative plaque marking the 150th anniversary of the original Kanrin Maru that brought Katsu Kaishu, Fukuzawa Yukichi, and "John" Nakahama Manjiro. Wow! all this and you don't need a passport! I will be going up there and hopefully you can too!
http://www.kanrin-maru150.com/modules/eguide/event.php?eid=19
http://www.asianart.org/japanambassadors.htm
Labels:
Japanese Arts,
Kanrin Maru,
展示
Special Tribute for Teachers of Traditional Japanese Arts During the WRA
This is a special event that will be taking place at the Koyasan Buddhist Temple in Little Tokyo which will pay tribute to the teachers of Traditional Japanese Arts while interned in America's own Concentration Camps (WRA - War Relocation Authority) during World War II. なに? Yes, we did have Concentration Camps in this country despite what our history books choose to call them. But I won't go into how feel about how our country was shamefully a gas chamber away from being like the Nazi's(or how much it pisses me off that idiots like current Senator(R) Lindsey Graham of South Carolina make so many openly racist comments about Japanese Americans). Instead, I am just going to repost the following information which I feel is important to the legacy to the Japanese-American Community and to the City of Angels.
So now that I got that off my chest here is the following information brought to you by the JACCC.
Sixty-eight years have passed since the end of World War II and the incarceration of approximately 112,000 Japanese nationals and Japanese Americans in concentration camps. Though much has been researched and written about the camp experience, the story of the brave artists who practiced and taught Japanese traditional arts remains a hidden legacy.
For one performance only, actual artists who taught and learned Japanese traditional arts during this period will be presented in performance and discussion. Classical Japanese dance (odori), classical music (nagauta) and Buddhist folk dance (bon odori) will be represented.
The artists who will participate in this event of performance and discussion are:
Bando Mitsusa - Tule Lake, CA, classical Japanese dance
Kineya Jyorokusho - Gila River, AZ, nagauta shamisen music; also taught koto and odori in camp
Hokunin Kyokuto Kimura, aka Molly Kimura - Tule Lake, CA, biwa music, ikenobo, tea ceremony, Japanese language, Buddhist studies
Kayoko Wakita - Manzanar, CA, koto and shamisen music, also representing her parents Baido Wakita (shakuhachi) and Nobue Wakita (koto and shamisen)
Hanayagi Reimichi, aka Reiko Iwanaga - Amache, CO, obon odori dance, also representing Rev. Yoshio Iwanaga, Poston, AZ camp
Yukino Harada - Amache, CO, Japanese classical dance
Fujima Rieyuki, aka Yuki Sato Lee-Minidoka, ID, Japanese classical dance, also representing her mother, Nishikawa Kikuharu
Koyasan Buddhist Temple - 342 E. 1st Street, 90012
Suggested donation:
$20 General Admission
$15 Seniors/Students with ID
For more information/reservations, please call (213) 628-2725 ext. 133 or email kelley@jaccc.org
This program is co-sponsored by the JACCC, Koyasan Buddhist Temple and the George & Sakaye Aratani Endowed Chair and the Asian American Studies Center, UCLA
So now that I got that off my chest here is the following information brought to you by the JACCC.
Sixty-eight years have passed since the end of World War II and the incarceration of approximately 112,000 Japanese nationals and Japanese Americans in concentration camps. Though much has been researched and written about the camp experience, the story of the brave artists who practiced and taught Japanese traditional arts remains a hidden legacy.
For one performance only, actual artists who taught and learned Japanese traditional arts during this period will be presented in performance and discussion. Classical Japanese dance (odori), classical music (nagauta) and Buddhist folk dance (bon odori) will be represented.
The artists who will participate in this event of performance and discussion are:
Bando Mitsusa - Tule Lake, CA, classical Japanese dance
Kineya Jyorokusho - Gila River, AZ, nagauta shamisen music; also taught koto and odori in camp
Hokunin Kyokuto Kimura, aka Molly Kimura - Tule Lake, CA, biwa music, ikenobo, tea ceremony, Japanese language, Buddhist studies
Kayoko Wakita - Manzanar, CA, koto and shamisen music, also representing her parents Baido Wakita (shakuhachi) and Nobue Wakita (koto and shamisen)
Hanayagi Reimichi, aka Reiko Iwanaga - Amache, CO, obon odori dance, also representing Rev. Yoshio Iwanaga, Poston, AZ camp
Yukino Harada - Amache, CO, Japanese classical dance
Fujima Rieyuki, aka Yuki Sato Lee-Minidoka, ID, Japanese classical dance, also representing her mother, Nishikawa Kikuharu
Koyasan Buddhist Temple - 342 E. 1st Street, 90012
Suggested donation:
$20 General Admission
$15 Seniors/Students with ID
For more information/reservations, please call (213) 628-2725 ext. 133 or email kelley@jaccc.org
This program is co-sponsored by the JACCC, Koyasan Buddhist Temple and the George & Sakaye Aratani Endowed Chair and the Asian American Studies Center, UCLA
Labels:
Internment Camps,
JACCC,
Japanese Arts,
Japanese Culture,
Koyasan,
Little Tokyo,
WRA,
WWII
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