"We saw 10-feet-diameter trees, 100 feet tall, dropping like toothpicks."
JoinedJanuary 31, 2010
Articles67
“We are ‘Oiwi and settlers who have benefitted from the Hawaiian renaissance, and still we see so many unfulfilled promises...
How artist and UH professor Gaye Chan came to celebrate the power of activist planting and potlucks with "Eating in Public."
What an independent Hawaiian governing body might look like in the 2000s is as yet unknown, but sci-fi helps reimagine the past, as well as the future.
A show at Treehouse celebrates Brian Bielmann's film photos from the '80s and '90s, when the talented waterman photographer made his own waterproof housing and emblazoned the path for generations to come.
“Fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth.” - Albert Camus
At the always anticipated Punahou Carnival, Sonny Ganaden works for minimum wage, exploring the annual event as a metaphor for local economic inequality.