Blog

September 7th, 2010

ARTeeeee


RSVP HERE!



July 23rd, 2010

Happy Aloha Friday

So I was so bummed last night when I got to Fresh Cafe at midnight to find Art & Flea already packed up and done! And I was just remarking to Super C-dubs how much I wanted to snag a copy of photographer Grady Gillian’s new zine, “Aloha Friday.” And what do I find awaiting me in my mailbox Friday morning? A nice new copy of “Aloha Friday” sent by Grady himself, accompanied by a nice little handwritten note (snail mail is awesome!) AND a set of his photo postcards, which are too awesome to write on and send to anyone, really. Thanks, Grady, for making my aloha Friday.

www.gradygillian.com.

June 28th, 2010

Partying For Peace

This past weekend, young and old alike partied for peace for the opening of Still Present Pasts // If Not Now When at the Bishop Museum. The exhibition, brought to Hawai’i by local organizers, Creative Modern Activism, spurred discussions about the experience of war and the possibility of peace. Still Present Pasts is the first component of the exhibition. Haunting photos from the Korean War of the division that split the country, and subsequently many families; first-hand video accounts tell the tale that many Koreans only talk about in hushed whispers; portraits of those forced to flee the war-torn country, Korean children scattered across the world and adopted. It’s really a quite moving. Helps us to understand the Korean plight and pain in a whole new light.

And the companion exhibit! In a word: WOW. Great work by local artists. If Not Now When, featured juried art from mainly local artists, organized by Trisha Lagaso Goldberg, curator for thirtyninehotel, and juried by Allison Wong, the executive director of The Contemporary Museum. INNW broaden the conversations about peace and justice even more.

That night the sounds of Paula Fuga, DJ Capecod and Linus could be heard from the FLUX booth, although we were too busy giving out free Sac Sac drinks (these juicy, sweet grape/pear/orange drinks from Palama Supermarket filled with ‘sacs’ of fruit flavor) and taking photos of patrons wearing hanbok. Other entertainment included: Youth Speaks Hawaii, eskae, Kavet & Nomasterbacks, and Korean hip-hop artists Skim and Denizen Kane, who made the ladies swoon.

It was a real good time. Thanks Creative Modern Activism and Ara Laylo for hooking us up! Kamsamnida!

April 21st, 2010

From Whistler to Warhol: Modernism on Paper

If you think the Honolulu Academy of Arts is simply an aging bastion of Asian art, think again. You’d be forgiven (as I was) for believing this museum was singularly devoted to art of the East. It turns out that the Academy has, buried in its collection, works by artists who have defined Modern art as we know it.

From Whistler to Warhol: Modernism on Paper, on display until July 3, unveils some of the key pieces of the Academy’s Modern collection, and it feels like a revelation. Not only does it detail, in a coherent fashion, the complex and circuitous history of Modern art, but it also sheds light on particular artists who’ve been eclipsed by the colossal shadows cast by art giants like Picasso and Pollock. What’s more, this exhibition seems to have come out of nowhere. Who was behind this show, and, more importantly, if the Academy had this incredible cache of Modern art in its collection, why hadn’t it been shown until now?

“No one knew what we had, so I embarked on this process of discovery for the past year,” Theresa Papanikolas, the Academy’s curator of European and American art, and the organizer of this exhibition, told me. A former curator at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, Papanikolas arrived at the Academy nearly two years ago, and decided to mount an exhibition of works on paper to showcase this little-known part of the Academy’s collection.

Keep Reading…

February 20th, 2010

New Exhibit at The Contemporary Museum

Last night I got a chance to preview The Contemporary Museum’s new exhibit of four new female artists. And believe me when I say, these women are strong independent women, who really know their craft. Needless to say, the new exhibit is amazing. Amazing works by Elizabeth Berdann, Judy Fox, Fay Ku and Allison Schulnik. Keep Reading…