panel discussion: Art & Transcultural Negotiation (9/26, 7-8:30p), Asian Art Museum
ART AND TRANSCULTURAL NEGOTIATION PANEL DISCUSSION
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 26 7-8:30PM
ASIAN ART MUSEUM, 200 LARKIN STREET, S.F.
$10 general admission, Free to members. Ticket link here. Special exhibition admission to Changing and Unchanging Things: Noguchi and Hasegawa in Postwar Japan is included. Doors open 6pm; Special Exhibition viewing from 8:30-9:30pm, Collection Galleries will not be open.
The Full Trilogy marks the culmination of Extracted: A Trilogy by Ranu Mukherjee with a panel discussion about the
legacy of the Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882 and performance by the Del Sol String Quartet
Join us for this evening with art historian Margo Machida and artists Michael Arcega, Ranu Mukherjee and Weston Teruya, who discuss themes of transcultural influence, connections to place, heritage and community raised by the exhibition Changing and Unchanging Things: Noguchi and Hasegawa in Postwar Japan.
Drawing on her current research focusing on transnationalism and contemporary Asian American and Indigenous Pacific Islander artists, Machida presents a keynote lecture highlighting individual artists’ practices in an increasingly cosmopolitan art world, where issues of identification remain fluid, as they were for Noguchi and Hasegawa. Bay Area artists Michael Arcega, Ranu Mukherjee and Weston Teruya join Machida for a panel discussion about how such themes manifest in their practices.
The Asian Art Museum is committed to making its events accessible to all. This event is wheelchair accessible and assistive listening devices (ALDs) will be provided. ASL interpretation or open captioning are available upon request; please email visit@asianart.org two weeks prior to the event to request an interpreter.
About the Presenters
Margo Machida is Professor Emerita of art history and Asian American studies at the University of Connecticut and the author of many books on Asian American and Pacific Islander artists, including “Unsettled Visions: Contemporary Asian American Artists and the Social Imaginary.”
Michael Arcega is an interdisciplinary artist working primarily in sculpture and installation whose work revolves largely around language. Directly informed by research, historical narratives, materiality and the format of jokes, his work addresses sociopolitical circumstances where power relations are unbalanced.
Ranu Mukherjee employs drawing, painting, animation and choreography to create hybrid installations that blur the line between the moving and the still image by imbuing each with qualities of the other. Her work investigates the construction of culture through the forces of creolization, migration, ecology, speculative fiction and desire as a collision of events that mark what she calls “shadowtime,” a sensation of different timescales coalescing into one.
Weston Teruya is known for his paper sculptural installations that examine the social dynamics, textures and histories of specific sites. Teruya is a founding member of Related Tactics, a collective of artists, writers, curators and educators of color creating projects and opportunities at the intersection of race and culture.