THE APPA Newsletter
September 20, 2005
Hispanic
Heritage Month began on September 15, the anniversary of independence for five
Latin American countriesÑCosta Rica, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, and
Nicaragua. In addition, Mexico declared its independence on September 16, and
Chile on September 18.
From:
http://www.infoplease.com/spot/hhm1.html
See This Weekend
MISSION STATEMENT:
Promote full utilization
of the capabilities of the Enterprise's employees and champion the betterment
of the company and community. Promote interest in Asian Pacific issues and
culture and act as a bridge to all groups within our community.
---------------------------------------------------------------------
ed. by Douglas Ikemi
(dkikemi@pacbell.net)
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Back issues of the
newsletter for all of 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, and 2005 are available at http://www.ikemi.info/APPA/newsletters.html
if you want to look up some past event. The website www.apa-pro.org
no longer exists
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Please send in
information on cultural events and news items to dkikemi@pacbell.net. Thanks to
those who have.
Long range calendar
items:
Chinatown Farmers Market
Every Thursday, 3:00pm to 7:00pm Chinatown Business Improvement District
http://www.ChinatownLA.com/ For
Information (213)_ 680-0243
Through October 16, From the Fire: Contemporary Korean Ceramics
At Pacific Asia Museum
This compelling exhibition brings together some of the
finest contemporary Korean ceramics in one of the largest surveys of works to
come to North America. From the Fire assembles Korean ceramic artists whose
pieces blend traditional techniques with new influences and innovative methods
to create both functional and sculptural works. The works, dating from the
1990s through 2003, reveal the adventurous spirit of KoreaÕs ceramic tradition
developed through thousands of years. Tradition is the undercurrent that shapes
most of the issues and dialogue in contemporary Korean ceramics. ÒWhat can the
ceramics of the past teach us today, and how are we continuing with the ceramic
skills passed down from our ancestors? How has function changed in ceramics in
a time when our lives have become deeply influenced by Western concepts?Ó From
the Fire looks at these issues through this synthesis of contemporary Korean
ceramics.
Time: 10:00 AM - 5:00 PM
Pacific Asia Museum
46 N Robles Ave., Pasadena,
CA 91101
Cost: $ 7 adults, $ 5 students
www.pacificasiamuseum.org/calendar/jsword.htm
May 26-Oct. 10 Japan Goes to the WorldÕs Fairs at the Los Angeles
County Museum of Art, www.LACMA.org.
May
15 through January 15, 2006 Milton Quon: A Retrospective
This
retrospective exhibit will showcase the broad range of Milton QuonÕs practice
from fine art to commercial work,much of which is on public display for the
first time.A quintessential Los Angeles artist, Quon was born in 1913 and
raised in Los Angeles. After graduating from the Chouinard Institute of Art,
QuonÕs career in the commercial arts took him to Walt Disney Studios where he
worked as a designer and painter. From the 1940s to the Ô60s, Quon worked as an
art director at ad agency Batten, Barton, Durstine, and Osborn. From whimsical
cherubs in DisneyÕs Fantasia to bold advertising posters, QuonÕs commercial
work will be presented alongside the artistÕs rich collection of fine art
works.
Tuesdays
through Sundays 10:00 a.m. - 3:00 p.m.
Chinese
American Museum, 425 N. Los Angeles St.
Suggested
$3 donations
INFO: 213-485-8567, www.camla.org
May
15 through January 15, 2006, A
Portrait of My Mother - A Photo Exhibit by Sam Lee
This
exhibit features a photographic series, A Portrait of My Mother by Sam Boi Lee,
an emerging Los Angeles-based, Chinese American photographer. LeeÕs poignant
photographic series operates like a photo-essay told through eloquent images of
his motherÕs world, from everyday objects that are imbued with his motherÕs
nurturing strength, to his own expressions of loss and love.
Tuesdays
through Sundays 10:00 a.m. - 3:00 p.m.
Chinese
American Museum, 425 N. Los Angeles St.
Suggested
$3 donations
INFO: 213-485-8567, www.camla.org
September 01, Shangri-La, Exhibition at UCLA Hammer Museum
through October 16, 2005. Patty ChangÕs video installation will examine
the concept of Shangri-La, or Heaven-on-Earth, and is inspired by James
HiltonÕs 1933 novel, Lost Horizon, and the artistÕs experiences in China.About
the Exhibition
Patty ChangÕs video installation examines the idea of
Shangri-La, the mythical hamlet of James HiltonÕs 1933 novel, Lost Horizon. The
novel and the subsequent film by Frank Capra (1937) propelled the notion of
Shangri-La into the collective cultural vocabulary. In 1997, a rural farming
town in South Central China near the Tibetan border began to declare itself the
place upon which HiltonÕs Shangri-La was based. Subsequently a dozen other
towns in the area claimed that they were the real Heaven-On-Earth, resulting in
a relentless marketing battle until the Chinese government intervened by
officially naming one town Shangri-La. ChangÕs Shangri-La is about the reality
and fiction inherent in the idea of a place that exists in both real and
mythical incarnations. Her work explores the idea of making a real journey to
an imaginary place.The installation centers on a video approximately thirty
minutes in length, shot on location in Shangri-La. A number of other elements
are in an adjacent gallery, primarily a large sculpture of a mirrored mountain
mounted on a rotating platform. Chang describes this sculpture as Òkind of a
giant sacred mountain prayer wheel crossed with a disco ball.ÓThe exhibition is
organized by Russell Ferguson, chief curator at the Hammer Museum.
Free Admission to all Hammer Museum exhibitions and public
programs from June 7 through September 4, 2005. Thursday, 11:00 AM - 7:00
PMUCLA
Hammer Museum
Los Angeles, CA 90095 Cost: Free, Hours Tue, Wed, Fri, Sat, 11am-7 pm
Thu, 11am-9 pm Sun, 11am-5 pm. hammerinfo@arts.ucla.edu
www.hammer.ucla.edu/
September 29, Screening- Someone Special
At Korean Cultural Center
Title: Someone Special (2004)
Directed by: Jang
Jin
Genre: Romantic comedy
Main Cast: Lee Na-yeong, Jeong
Jae-yeong
Running time & Rating: 106 minuets, Unrated
Provided
by the Cinema Service (Korean with English Subtitles)
Synopsis: Dong Chi-seong used to be a popular pitcher but is now
in the minor league playing an outfielder. Suddenly his girlfriend breaks up
with him. WhatÕs more, he hears from his doctor that he only has three months
left. Time will heal a heartbreak they say, but Chi-seong doesnÕt have time.
With a shattered heart he goes to his favorite bar where he gets drunk on just
three drinks. He opens his eyes to find himself in a motel room. The bartender
tells Chi-seong, that he hadnÕt made any mistakes while drunk, and that she had
brought him to the motel Ôfolded in a paper bag.Õ She is an unusual girl. The
next day on his way back from practice, he hears a story on the radio, and it
sounds familiarÉ
About Director Jang Jin
Writer/director Jang Jin is known as one of the most distinctive
voices to emerge out of the Korean cinema renaissance that began in the late
1990s. From the time he broke into the realm of theatre in 1995 with critically
acclaimed plays like Heotang, he has developed a unique style that mixes humor,
melodrama, and a keen observation of society.
JangÕs experience in film first began back in 1995 when he
assisted with screenplay of the critically acclaimed A Hot Roof. After
directing a short film, he dedicated himself to debuting as a film director,
and in 1998 his first feature The Happenings was screened at the Pusan
International Film Festival. He followed that up with The Spy (1999), a
critically acclaimed comedy about a North Koran espionage agent who struggles
to adjust to living in Seoul. JangÕs biggest box-office success to date was
with Gun & Talks (2001), a comedy about four talkative assassins that was a
major hit in Korea, and is also being remade for the Chinese market. He will
also enter the books as KoreaÕs first director to make a film to be screened
for screening on mobile phones.
After establishing the production company Film It Suda, Jang has
also began working as a producer. Recent work of his as producer and
screenwriter include A Letter from Mars (2003) and No Comment (2001), an
unusual example of omnibus work by debut directors that opened at #1 at the
local box-office in Korea.
The film screenings are free and open to public on a first-come,
first-serve basis.
Thursday 7:00 PM - 9:00 PM
Korean Cultural Center
3rd Floor, Auditorium (Ari
Hall)
5505 Wilshire Blvd.
Los Angeles, CA 90036
Cost: Free
Tel: 323-936-7141
cinema@kccla.org
September 30,Performance - Bamboo and Silk At The Armory Center
for the Arts, Traditional Music from China and Japan
The Armory Center for the Arts and the Pacific Asia Museum
together present Bamboo and Silk, an evening of traditional music from China
and Japan. For this performance, Bill Shozan Schultz plays the centuries old
music of meditating Zen monks, Honkyoku, on the shakuhachi, a Japanese
end-blown bamboo flute. Performing on the sheng, an instrument with a
2,000-year history that consists of numerous bamboo pipes, Qi-Chao Liu also
plays the silk stringed violin-like erhu that is bowed while held in an upright
position.
Because of the richness of our Los Angeles environs, both
in architecture and in culture, it shouldn't come as a surprise that the
unusual setting for this ancient music from China and Japan is an
architecturally significant building in old town Pasadena whose inner walls are
the usual home for cutting edge modern art.
Friday, 8:00 PM -
10:00 PM
The Armory Center for the Arts , 145 North Raymond
Avenue
Pasadena, CA 91103
Cost: $10 general admission; $5 seniors and students; Armory
members free
Tel: (626) 792-5101 x117, www.armoryarts.org
Oct 1 Shangri-La
Exhibition at UCLA Hammer Museum through October 16, 2005
Patty ChangÕs video installation will examine the concept of
Shangri-La, or Heaven-on-Earth, and is inspired by James HiltonÕs 1933 novel,
Lost Horizon, and the artistÕs experiences in China.
About the Exhibition
Patty ChangÕs video installation
examines the idea of Shangri-La, the mythical hamlet of James HiltonÕs 1933
novel, Lost Horizon. The novel and the subsequent film by Frank Capra (1937)
propelled the notion of Shangri-La into the collective cultural vocabulary. In
1997, a rural farming town in South Central China near the Tibetan border began
to declare itself the place upon which HiltonÕs Shangri-La was based.
Subsequently a dozen other towns in the area claimed that they were the real
Heaven-On-Earth, resulting in a relentless marketing battle until the Chinese
government intervened by officially naming one town Shangri-La. ChangÕs
Shangri-La is about the reality and fiction inherent in the idea of a place
that exists in both real and mythical incarnations. Her work explores the idea
of making a real journey to an imaginary place.
The installation centers on a video approximately thirty
minutes in length, shot on location in Shangri-La. A number of other elements
are in an adjacent gallery, primarily a large sculpture of a mirrored mountain
mounted on a rotating platform. Chang describes this sculpture as Òkind of a
giant sacred mountain prayer wheel crossed with a disco ball.Ó
The exhibition is organized by Russell Ferguson, chief curator at
the Hammer Museum.
Free Admission to all Hammer Museum
exhibitions and public programs from June 7 through September 4, 2005.
Saturday, Time: 11:00 AM - 7:00 PM
UCLA
Hammer Museum
Los Angeles, CA 90095
Cost: Free
Special Instructions
Hours Tue, Wed, Fri, Sat, 11am-7 pm Thu, 11am-9 pm Sun, 11am-5 pm
hammerinfo@arts.ucla.edu
www.hammer.ucla.edu/
Oct 1 GAGAKU: MUSIC & DANCE OF ANCIENT ASIA The Great Teacher KÕung Fu-Tzu [Confucius] said that,
Òthe only really essential department of government is the Department of Music
and RitesÓ.
In
Far Eastern tradition, the purpose of art is to educate and uplift in a moral
and religious way. Music and ritual are looked upon as essential to life and
not simply as another extra-curricular activity. This ancient music survives
today in Japan as Gagaku and has been preserved virtually unchanged since the
8th century. Still performed in temples, shrines, and the Japanese Imperial
Court, Gagaku is the oldest orchestral tradition in the world, evoking an
atmosphere and attitude of ancient Asia. Senshin Temple is affiliated with the
Jodoshinshu school of Buddhism that has used Gagaku liturgically and as Òdharma
entertainmentÓ since the 17th century. Kinnara Gagaku was formed in 1970 at
Senshin Buddhist Temple under Professor Suenobu Togi of the Japanese Imperial
Household Department of Music and the UCLA Department of Ethnomusicology.
Presented
by Kinnara Gagaku, Senshin Temple.
Saturday,
3:00pm
Senshin
Temple Courtyard, 1311 W. 37th Street, Los Angeles, CA 90007. Suggested
Donation $5
Ticket info: (323) 731-4617 Outdoor Event
http://www.festivalofsacredmusic.org/events/10.1_gagaku.html
October 02 Celebration of UCLA's Sambhi Chair in Indian Music --
Shujaat Khan and Abhiman Kaushal Perform
New endowment to expand research into and teaching about
Indian music.
This concert celebrates the establishment of the Mohindar Brar
Sambhi Endowed Chair of Indian Music in the UCLA Department of Ethnomusicology.
It is also in celebration of the birthday of Mahatma Gandhi.
Sunday,11:00 AM - 1:00 PM
UCLA Schoenberg Hall
Los Angeles, CA 90095
Cost: $5 students with ID, $15 Music Circle Members, $25 General
Admission
No advance sales. Tickets available at the door beginning
at 10 am. Parking in lot 2 (at Hilgard and Westholme) is $8.
For more information please contact
CISA: 310-206-2654 Music Circle: 626-449 6987 www.international.ucla.edu/southasia
Oct
7-9 Grand Sumo Las Vegas, director@usasumo.com
or call 310-472-5862
Friday,
October
7, 8:00pm
Saturday,
October 8, 8:00pm
Sunday,
October 9, 2:00pm
Mandalay
Bay Resort & Casino, Las Vegas
http://www.usasumo.com/whats_new/grandsumo.html
Oct
9 Tsugaru Shamisen Ensemble Waon at the Secret Rose Theatre, 11246 Magnolia Blvd. In the NoHo Theatre and
Arts District, North Hollywood, 7PM . Tickets $10, reservations at
818-766-3691, x 2
Zero Project (2000-2004)
Exhibition at Sherry Frumkin Gallery Through October 15, 2005
Contemporary photography, painting, installation. Nakahashi
Katsushige, ÒZero Project (2000-2004)Ó, an on-going series of performances that
challenge the meaning of war. From tens of thousands of enlarge photographs of
toy model war planes, life sized models are reassembled and ceremonially
burned.
Time: 12:00 PM - 6:00 PM
Sherry Frumkin Gallery
3026 Airport Ave., Suite
21
Santa Monica Blvd, CA 90405
Weds.-Sat., 12-6pm
Tel: (310) 397-7493
info@frumkingallery.com
www.frumkingallery.com
Oct
16 30th Anniversay Japanese American Cultural Association of Orange
County Festival, Amada Plaza, 7025 Firestone Blvd., Buena Park, , 714-739-2111.
Tickets $35, call 714-835-7535. Exhibitions and demonstrations 11AM-4PM,
Performances in Amada Hall and outside from 2-4PM.
Oct 30 Japanese Food Festival, Experience and Explore
Japanese Food & Culture
Kaiseki - Sushi - Tempura - Tofu - Yakitori - etc...Japanese Koto
Music, Jazz, etc..
Limited to 1,000 guests. Ticket must be purchased in advance for
admission!
Ticket Fee: Advance ticket $30.00 - $30.00 Food &
Beverage ticket value -
Ticket Sale: JRA Office, 324 E. First St #350, Los Angeles,
CA90012
(213) 687-4055
11am - 3pm
The New Otani Hotel & Garden- Golden Ballroom
& Japanese Garden, 120 S. Los Angeles St., Los Angeles, CA 90012, Tel:
213-629-1200
Raffle Prizes, A grand prize of a round trip ticket for two to
Japan and more!! All winners will be chosen from those who participate in our
survey.
[Gift Bag will given to the all guests.
Nov 5 The 18th Sammy Yukuan Lee Lecture: Recarving China's Past:
"Wu Family Shrines" and the Story of the Stones
At the UCLA Fowler Museum
Cary Y. Liu, Curator of Asian Art
Princeton University Art
Museum
The history of the Wu family shrines begins with a conspicuous
absence. Before the Song dynasty (960-1279) there is no textual or visual
record of any stone carving or cemetery structures belonging to a Wu family in
Shandong. In the Song, rubbings and textual descriptions became the basis for
an assemblage that first came to be known as the Wu family shrines. The
assemblage was comprised primarily of four stele and one gate-pillar
inscriptions, and, secondly, a few pictorial stones. This assemblage only
became associated with actual stones after Huang Yi's claimed rediscovery of
the cemetery stones in 1786. Since that rediscovery, however, scholarship has,
with few exceptions, relied on rubbings and received editions of Song texts to
reinforce the recognized assemblage as the Wu family shrines. This talk looks
at the history of the stones themselves and their architecture to show that the
story they tell may not match the traditional assemblage.
Cary Y. Liu is Curator of Asian Art at the Princeton University
Art Museum. A specialist in Chinese architectural history and art history, he
has M.Arch and Ph.D. degrees from Princeton University. Recent exhibitions for
which he has been curator include: Recarving China's Past: Art, Archaeology,
and Architecture of the Wu Family Shrines (2005), Providing for the Afterlife:
"Brilliant Artifacts" for Shandong (2005), Seeing Double: Copies and
Copying in the Arts of China" (2001), and The Embodied Image: Chinese
Calligraphy from the John B. Elliott Collection (1999). Among his publications
are contributions to Art of the Sung and Yuan: Ritual, Ethnicity, and Style
in Painting (1999), and
the journals Hong Kong University Museum Journal, Oriental Art, Orientations, and T'oung Pao. His most recently published essay,
"Chinese Architectural Aesthetics: Patterns of Living and Being between
Past and Present," can be found in House, Home, Family: Living and
Being Chinese (2005,
Knapp and Lo, eds.).
The Sammy Yukuan Lee Lectures on Chinese Art and Archaeology are
sponsored by the UCLA Asia
Institute and funded by the Lee Family Foundation. The series began
in 1982 to commemorate the 80th birthday of Sammy Yukuan Lee, a noted collector
and authority on Chinese art, particularly lacquers, textiles, and ceramics.
Mr. Lee is now in his 103rd year and remains an active art collector. The
lectures have been held annually in recent years and this yearÕs event is the
18th in the series. The lecture is cosponsored by the UCLA Fowler Museum of Cultural History and
the UCLA Center for Chinese Studies.
A list of previous
lectures is available online.
Parking on the UCLA campus is $8. The lecture and museum admission
are free and open to the public. A reception with refreshments will follow the
talk.
Please call 310-825-0007 or write asia@international.ucla.edu for more
information.
IMAGE ABOVE: "Sleeve Dancer," from the Western Han
dynasty (206 bce - 8 ce), earthenware with pigments, approximately 41 cm tall,
from a private collection. Photo courtesy of the Princeton University Art
Museum.
Saturday,: 2:00 PM - 3:30 PM
UCLA Fowler Museum, Los Angeles, CA 90095
Cost: Free, RSVP appreciated but not required.
Tel: 310-825-5007
asia@international.ucla.edu www.international.ucla.edu/asia
Nov 18 to Feb 12, 2006
Place/Displace, Three Generations Taiwanese Art exhibit at the Pacific Asia
Museum
NOV. 19th (Sat) & 20th (Sun), JAPAN EXPO 2005, Los Angeles
Convention Center, West Hall A
JAPAN EXPO is the largest US-Japan event that was initially
started in an effort to strengthen the ties of friendship with the United
States. Last year we have successfully concluded our 25th anniversary and we
thank you for your continuous support, as we could not have come this far
without your cooperation and devotion.
We are committed to advance our two great nations, U.S Ð Japan
relationship to the next level.
A wide-range of exhibits is in store for the The 26th JAPAN EXPO
as well as presentation of Japanese traditional culture, handicrafts, and
various regional products.
We will also introduce JapanÕs latest technology, such as game
softwares, comics and high-efficiency ÒMade in JapanÓ products. We will also
provide a section where attendees can relish in the aesthetics of Japanese
cuisine. On the main stage of Japan Expo there will be some of JapanÕs
traditional performances that will be presented in a grand style, thus far, a
program that is rich in content. In 2005, we are planning to invite one of the
KABUKI master for their unforgettable performances.
The JAPAN EXPO attracted more than 30,000 consumers in 2004, and
we expect to surpass that number, it will give you a new exposure that will be
beneficial to you. We believe it is an excellent venue to test market your
products and services. http://www.japanexpo.org/
December 2 Linda's Wondrous Violin
Friday at 12:30 pm
Shumei Hall, 2430 E. Colorado Blvd., Pasadena 91107
Free Admission
A brilliant violonist, Linda Wang made her solo debut with the New
York Philharmonic under Zubin Mehta when she was nine years old. She will
present a celebration of violin music from the 17th century to the present.
Children will learn about the history of the violin and witness its wondrous
capabilities.
Reservations can be made by calling at 626 584 8841.
This concert is supported by the Pasadena Showcase House for the Arts.
http://www.shumeiarts.org/events.html
Dec 6 Lecture- "Japanese and Chinese Gardens: Are They
Different?"
At The Huntington Library
A series of public lectures on Chinese gardens and related topics
begins this fall at the Huntington Library, Art Collections, and Botanical
Gardens. Addressing different aspects of the history, art, and culture of
China that are closely linked to traditional garden designs, these lectures will
help create the historical and cultural contexts for the HuntingtonÕs own
Chinese garden, which is currently under construction. The first series,
consisting of four lectures, will focus on defining the characteristics of
Chinese garden design. The lectures are free. All lectures begin at
7:30 p.m. in FriendsÕ Hall at The Huntington.
Kendall H. Brown, professor of art history at California State
University, Long Beach, will discuss the styles and designs of Japanese gardens
both in and outside of Japan, and will provide insights into how a Japanese
garden differs from a Chinese garden. The topic is particularly
interesting as it relates to The Huntington, where a Japanese style garden
established nearly 100 years ago will soon be joined by a Chinese garden.
In addition to his renowned scholarship in Japanese prints and painting, Brown
is also a well-known speaker and writer on Japanese gardens.
Tuesday, 7:30 PM -
9:30 PM
The Huntington Library
1151 Oxford Road, San Marino,
CA 91108
Cost: Free
For more information please contact
Lisa
Blackburn Tel: (626) 405-2140 lblackburn@huntington.org
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This Weekend (and
earlier)
September 21-26 Performance - National Ballet of China
At Orange County Performing Arts Center, Segerstrom Hall
Admirers of award-winning director Zhang Yimou have always noted
the beautifully choreographed movement in his acclaimed films House of Flying
Daggers, Hero and Raise the Red Lantern. The internationally-celebrated artist
brings his cinematic vision to the ballet stage as he transforms one of his
most acclaimed movies, Raise the Red Lantern, into a ravishing ballet that
fuses elements of Western and Eastern art. Classical ballet combines with
Chinese theatre creating stunning visual imagery and powerful storytelling.
Date: Wednesday, 8:00 PM - 10:00 PM
Orange County Performing Arts Center, Segerstrom Hall
600
Town Center Drive
Coata Mesa, CA 92626
Cost: $25.00 - $80.00
Tel: (714) 556-2787
September 23 Performance - SACRED BUDDHIST DANCE OF NEPAL
At Pacific Asia Museum
Presented by Pacific Asia Museum Himalayan Arts Council
PRAJWAL VAJRACHARYA performs a rare and ancient dance form of the
Buddhist priests of Nepal. It is a meditation discipline, a vehicle of
bodily transformation, and a sacred opportunity for an audience to experience a
vision of divine beauty.
Date: Friday, , 2005
Time: 6:30 PM - 8:30 PM
Pacific Asia Museum
46 N. Los Robles Ave.,
Pasadena,
CA
Cost: $10 for museum members, $15 for non-members.
Tel: (626) 449-2742, ext. 31
www.pacificasiamuseum.org
Sept 17-Oct 2 2005 World Festival of Sacred Music - Los Angeles
At Los Angeles
1000 artists, 43 events, 16 days
"...one of the planet's biggest and most intriguing
world-music festivals." - New York Times, May 2005
With the success of the 1999 and 2002 World Festival of Sacred
Music - Los Angeles (WFSM-LA), a powerful coalition of arts, faith, cultural,
community, and environmental groups announce the 2005 Festival. WFSM-LA is the
largest citywide Festival in Los Angeles offering forty-three events over
sixteen days in venues across Los Angeles region from September 17th to October
2nd.
From the Throat singers of Tuva, Siberia to music from the Czech
Republic, Korea, Thailand, Mexico, and the magnificent diversity of Los Angeles
artists - the Festival provides opportunities for you to cross boundaries of
religion, class, culture, race, and language, to share cultural traditions and
to contemplate the spiritual, ethical and ecological questions of our times.
The 43 events in the Festival are an invitation to our
many communities to witness music both familiar and new. Through music, each
person in the audience can expand their definition of who they are as members
of this city, go beyond the familiar, and explore the potential of
intercultural and interfaith collaboration.
History: The first Festival was initiated by His Holiness the
Dalai Lama in 1999 to mark the millennium with a message of peace, cultural
understanding, and spirituality: the goal was to present the Festival on four
continents. Building on the success of the ÒAmericasÓ Festival, the LA
organizing partners - UCLA Center for Intercultural Performance, Earthways
Foundation, and the Foundation for World Arts - committed to the creation of a
new Festival in 2002 and every three years thereafter.
In 1999 & 2002 this non-commercial, community oriented,
citywide Festival had a combined estimated attendance of 90,000 people.
10:00 AM - 9:00 PM
Various Locations
Los Angeles, CA
September 22-25 32nd Annual Los Angeles Korean Festival
Seoul International Park in Koreatown, Los Angeles
3250 San Marino St, Los Angeles, CA 90006-1315
In addition to the commemoration of the 100th year Korean immigration, we invite you to join us in our celebration as 2005 marks our 32nd anniversary of the Los Angeles Korean Festival with improved programs and entertainment. We would also like to extend a heart-felt thank you for your participation throughout past 30 years.
The Los Angeles Korean Festival is a tool for which people are
encouraged to come together, share culture and get a better understanding of
their fellow neighbors. The Festival is a not-for-profit organization and is
solely committed, in enriching the lives of the community and all of Los
Angeles. LAKFF has continued to run its primary goals, to advocate the
awareness of the Korean culture and promote racial tranquility all throughout
Los Angeles.
The festival is an important project for the merits and values
that it maintains. This particular festival acts as a gateway for the community
to interact with one another. The Festival begins on Thursday, September 22nd
2005 at 11:00am kicking off the celebration with an opening ceremony at 6:00pm
and our street carnival fair beginning Friday afternoon continuing until
Sunday. The carnival is located adjacent to the park. Within the park our more
popular attractions are located such as our performing main stage, business
expo and international food court.
There are over 190 business expo booths selling or introducing
their product or service to our attendees. The festival is open to general
public and free of charge including our concerts and performances on the main
stage. Many companies have found our promotional booth a vital tool as a way to
introduce their company identity to our attendees; these promotional booths
offer the interaction with the consumers that other forms of advertising don't.
Along with the expo booths, firms also find useful to advertise in our program
booklet (color 8.5" X11"), which is handed out to all our attendees.
The program booklet contains the festival's event schedule and photo showcase
along with companies' advertisements.
The Korean parade is one of Saturday's main attractions it
showcases local and citywide organizations as well as our more involved
sponsors. You may use the parade to strengthen your company name or your
advertising campaign. The parade is one of the many important medians of
promotion that the Los Angeles Korean Festival offers that your company can
utilize to outreach to the people of the Greater Los Angeles Area.
Outline of 4-Day Festival
Day 1
Thursday, September 22, 2005
Market Fair 11 AM - 11PM
(International foods and Merchandise for sale).
Games & Carnival rides Open 2PM-11PM
All Day World Culture performances. 4PM-11PM
Opening Ceremony / VIP Reception 7:00pm
(City & Government officials present for Ceremonies)
Day 2
Friday,
September 23, 2005
Market Fair 11AM - 11PM
Stage Performances
2PM-11PM
Shows include popular performers from Korea and United
States
3rd World Culture Talent Show; open to public
Games &
Carnival rides Open 2PM-11PM
Day 3
Saturday,
September 24, 2005
Korean Parade (Olympic Blvd. between Vermont &
Western Ave.) 3PM
All Day World Culture performances. 12PM-11PM
Market Fair 11AM-11PM
Games & Carnival rides 12PM-11PM
Day 4
Sunday,
September 25, 2005
Market Fair 11AM-11PM
All Day World Culture
performances. 12PM-11PM
Games & Carnival rides
12PM-11PM
Closing Ceremony / VIP Reception 7:00pm
(City &
Government officials present for Ceremonies)
Food offered during the festivities include various tradional,
popular Korean dishes, Korean snacks, drinks, and many other specialty items.
Parking and Directions: Seoul International Park, 3250 San Marino St, Los Angeles,
CA 90006
http://www.lakoreanfestival.com/main.htm
September 22 Experience the Beauty of Japan
A Special Lecture and Demonstration on Noh Performance
Thursday, at 7:00 pm
Shumei Hall, 2430 E. Colorado Blvd., Pasadena 91107
Free Admission
A timeless form of art and beauty, this 600 year old classical theater combines many elements including dance, drama, music, poetry and mask making. The origins of Noh are ancient Chinese performing arts called sarugaku and traditional Japanese dance known as dengaku. Noh, now experiencing a renewed popularity among contemporary audiences, remains essentially unchanged from its 14th Century beginnings.
This lecture and performance will feature the acclaimed Kanze
School, actor MASASHI NOMURA,
descendant from a very distinguished
lineage of Noh actors. Mr. Nomura will be accompanied by Nohkan
flutist
RICHARD EMMERT and Otsuzumi hip drummer EITARO OHKURA.
Masashi Nomura, Noh actor from Kanze Noh School (Biography)
Richard Emmert, Nohkan Flute (Biography)
Eitaro Ohkura, Otsuzumi Hip Drum from Ohkura school (Biography)
This event is supported by the Theatre of Yugen of San Francisco
and the Japanese Traditional Performing Arts Organization.
626-584-8841
http://www.shumeiarts.org/events.html
Sept 22 Lela Lee and
''Angry Little Asian Girl''
As
a child, Lela Lee was ridiculed and humiliated for something she could not help
-- her gender and her ethnicity. She used those experiences to create the
wildly popular comic strip, Angry Little Asian Girl.
Now,
in addition to an ultra-hip product line, the strip has been compiled in a new
book published by Harry N. Abrahms. Book signing to follow. 7:30PM at the JANM,
www.janm.org
Sept
23 "Moon of the Scarlet Plums"- Crazy Horse
Japanese
Noh theatrical experience produced by Theatre of Yugen (San
Francisco) collaboration with American
Indian Dance Theater and Tiny Alice (Tokyo) 8PM, $33
Part of 2005 World Festival of Sacret
Music - Los Angeles
Friday,
8 pm. James Armstrong Theater in
Torrance California
Theatre
of Yugen's world theater production, Moon of the Scarlet Plums, is a Japanese Noh and Native American
collaboration, inspired by the story of the 19th century Oglala Sioux hero,
Crazy Horse. The show is directed by Yuriko Doi, composed by Richard Emmert,
with songs by Darrell Paskimin and choreography by Hanay Gieogamah of the
American Indian Dance Theater, Jane Lind and Masashi Nomura. Written by Erik
Ehn with material from John Neihardt's Cycle of the West and Black Elk Speaks, with potent symbols and evocative performances, this
production crosses cultural boundaries and offers a theatrical experience that
spans space, time and place.
It
evokes the powerful spirit world of Japanese traditional Noh Theatre and Native
American art forms in telling the story of a young Native American who searches
for identity and spiritual vision in our contemporary times. The music and
instrumentation is based on Noh structure and is combined with Native American
singers, drums and flutes.
This
program will be co-presented by the Torrance Cultural Arts Center
Foundation and Collaboration with
Theatre of Yugen and Tiny Alice(Tokyo).
http://www.jtpao.org/upcoming.htm
Sept 25 CELESTIAL SOUNDS AND DANCING GODS - AUM-SHO-NAMAH
Dance & Music of India, Persia and Japan
Making artistic connections between people has never been more
important. In culture, we are equals and through art we can weave together
meaningful exchange and understanding. World-class artists offer exhilarating
music and dance that seamlessly combines the splendor from India, Japan and
Persia in an authentic and original production. Three Los Angeles based
companies under the artistic direction of Viji Prakash will share the stage in
an unusual and exciting convergence of ancient and enduring traditions.
Shakti Dance Company depicts the myths and legends of the cosmos
through Bharata Natyam, the sacred Indian temple dance. Ornate costumes,
spellbinding footwork and intricate hand gestures guided by masterful musicians
from India offer a stunning visual and aural experience.
SHO, the spirited and energetic Taiko Drumming group under the
leadership of Steven Tokunaga, will perform traditional and contemporary
Japanese drumming with accomplished guest Koji Nakamura from Japan.
NAMAH, under the talented director Banafsheh Sayyad, is devoted to
work that draws upon mystical Persian spiritual practices. Inspired by the
masterpieces of traditional poets, Namah returns to the Festival to present
work that draws upon the ancient to fashion the new. Presented by Shakti Dance
Company.
Sunday, 4:00pm
Venue: James Armstrong Theatre at the Torrance Cultural Arts
Center
Address: 3300 Civic Center Drive, Torrance, CA 90503
Ticket price(s): $20 (advance sales); $25 (at the door)
Ticket info: (310) 839-2890 -or- www.shaktidancecompany.com; Box Office
310-781-7171
http://www.festivalofsacredmusic.org/home.html
September 25 5th Annual
Japan America Kite Festival
Seal
Beach Pier, City of Seal Beach
10:00 a.m.ÐSundown
Come
with family and friends to enjoy Japanese and intÕl kites of all sizes and colors. A variety of Kites will be available
for sale, or bring your own!
FREE Sode Kimono Kite Workshop for Children! Plus:
Japanese Food Booth
Huge 50Õ x 100Õ Kites
Taiko Drummers
Raffle Prizes
Kite ÒCandy DropsÓ
Rokaku Kite Battles
Stunt Kite Demos
Kite Ballet
FREE Admission
For more information, please call (213)
627-6217 x205 or visit
www.jas-socal.org
Meet
Japanese Kite Master, Mikio Toki and participate in his Japanese kite
workshop. He is internationally
renowned for his Edo kite designs and craftsmanship. In addition to his traditional kites, Mikio will fly his
450-foot ÒlineÓ kite with 150 US and Japanese flags.
Seal
Beach Pier (Located at Main St. & Ocean Ave.)
Parking
is accessible from Ocean at the
pier,
and at the North end of the beach.
Last weekend I went to:
See Kamikaze Girls. This is a fun odd couple film about alienated youth in Japan. Momoko and Ichigo are socially crippled
17 year olds from two very disparate subcultures, the Lolitas (http://www.morbidoutlook.com/fashion/articles/2002_07_gothiclolita.html,
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gothic_Lolita;
Lolitas donÕt have affairs with older men-thatÕs another subculture) and the
Yanki biker gangs, who somehow
meet . Following time honored cinema tradition, they learn that friendship is
possible without any basis for mutual understanding. The best scene is taken directly from ÒWaiting for the MoonÓ
(http://movies2.nytimes.com/gst/movies/movie.html?v_id=53162)
in which a fashion designer tells Momoko how he sacrificed his friends and
personal relationships for his career and warns her not to make that mistake.
The movie includes a violent and bloody Yanki gang fight, and Ichigo usually
expresses her feelings with physical violence, but both girls are against sex,
drugs, and alcohol.
------------------------------------------------------
Links to selected
articles from the LA Times. To actually access the articles, you may have to
sign up for a free account.
Sep 15 Minority
Pupils Said Shortchanged
Schools with more blacks and Latinos have
less-experienced, lower-paid teachers, a group says its study of salaries
shows.
By Seema Mehta, Times Staff Writer
http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-me-salary15sep15,1,2506488.story
Sep 14 U.S.
Data Reveal Loan Rate Disparity
Blacks and Hispanics are far more likely than whites to
get high-cost mortgages, a study finds.
By Jonathan Peterson, Times Staff Writer
http://www.latimes.com/business/la-fi-loans14sep14,1,4592052.story
Sep 20 sao
Nakauchi, 83; Brought U.S. Retail Methods to Japan
From Times Staff and Wire Reports
http://www.latimes.com/news/printedition/california/la-me-passings20.1sep20,1,1523719.story
Sep 18 Manzanar
Icon Now More Than a Memory
A re-created guard
tower is dedicated on the desert site where Japanese Americans were imprisoned
during World War II.
By Jocelyn Y. Stewart,
Times Staff Writer
http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-me-manzanar18sep18,1,7516049.story
Sep 17 COLUMN ONE
China Changes Coarse
The government has set itself a monumental task ahead of
the 2008 Olympics: teaching the nation's 1 billion people how to be polite.
By Mark Magnier, Times
Staff Writer
http://www.latimes.com/news/printedition/la-fg-manners17sep17,1,1585825.story
Sep 14 OBITUARIES
Mark Matthews, 111; Among the Last of Nation's
Buffalo Soldiers
From the Washington Post
http://www.latimes.com/news/local/state/la-me-matthews14sep14,1,1930717.story
Sep 14 Honda
Won't Build V-8 Engines
From Bloomberg News
http://www.latimes.com/business/la-fi-autos14sep14,1,5308362.story
Sep 16 IN BRIEF / TRADE
Embargoed Chinese Apparel to Be Donated
From Bloomberg News
http://www.latimes.com/business/la-fi-rup16.5sep16,1,2653483.story
Sep 18 Making a Name in San Jose Politics
Nguyen (Madison) beats Nguyen (Linda) to become 1st
Vietnamese American on council.
By Lee Romney, Times
Staff Writer
http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-me-viet19sep19,1,3053690.story
Sep 15 Democrat Cuts Through GOP 'Malaise' for Win
Discontent with Bush, governor is cited in low voter
turnout for swing Assembly district race. [Ted Lieu story]
By Amanda Covarrubias,
Times Staff Writer
http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-me-southbay15sep15,1,2980279.story