Society
What’s on the minds of the youngest generation in the local workforce who can barely afford Hawai’i?
For the past three years, filmmakers Joan Lander and Sancia Miala Shiba Nash have been digitizing and cataloging half a century’s worth of invaluable Native Hawaiian footage.
At a monthly mahjong gathering, a new generation of players finds community through the centuries-old game.
For two Hawai‘i Island ceremonialists, re-indigenizing a people to their homeland begins with marking the seasonal transitions that Kānaka Maoli have formalized for centuries.
Over the last few years, waves of change have rocked the surfing world, especially for Hawai‘i and women athletes.
In the photographer’s eclectic journals, fleeting scenes of the islands and elsewhere are captured with stealth, spontaneity, and wonder.
For the visual artist, artmaking in all its forms is a metaphysical deep dive into spirituality, community building, and connection.