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         Asian-american Arts:     more books (100)
  1. MASTERPIECES OF ASIAN ART IN AMERICAN COLLECTIONS II. by MASTERPIECES OF ASIAN ART, 1970
  2. Masterpieces of Asian Art in American Collections II, An Offering of Treasures Celebrating the Tenth Anniversary... by Asia Society, 1970
  3. Masterpieces of Asian Art in American Collections, II. An offering of treasures celebrating the tenth anniversary of Asia House Gallery. Spring 1970. Statement by John D. Rockefeller 3rd. Foreword by Gordon Bailey Washburn. by New York. Asia Society., 1970
  4. American Collectors of Asian Art by Pal Pratapaditya, 1986-06
  5. Masterpieces of Asian art in American collections, II by Gordon B Washburn, 1970
  6. Winter (Sale) 2005 - Ivey-Selkirk - Saint Louis, MO - December 3 & 4, 2005 - Featuring English & ContinentalPaintings, Porcelain, Decorative Arts, Prints & Books, Furniture, American & Asian Decorative Arts & More by Ivey-Selkirk, 2005
  7. Fresh Talk/Daring Gazes: Conversations on Asian American Art by Elaine H. Kim, Margo Machida, et all 2005-02-23
  8. With New Eyes: Toward an Asian American Art History in the West
  9. East/West: Contemporary Asian-American art in Los Angeles : Montgomery Gallery, Pomona College, Galleries of the Claremont Colleges, March 2-30, 1986 by Mary Davis MacNaughton, 1986
  10. Masterpieces of Asian Art in American Collections by Laurence Sickman, 1960
  11. AMERICAN COLLECTORS OF ASIAN ART by Pratapaditya, ed. Pal, 1986
  12. Moving the Image: Independent Asian Pacific American Media Arts
  13. Moving the Image: Independent Asian Pacific American Media Arts 1970-1990
  14. Decorative Arts Auction - American & European Paintings, Posters, Bronzes, Asian Objects, American & European Art Nouveau Art Glass, Lamps & Ceramics, American Studio Glass - Treadway - Toomey Galleries - 3/19/2000 by Treadway - Toomey Galleries, 2000

21. Asian American Arts
Asian American arts Centre, founded in 1974, brings visual, performing and traditional arts to the general public. Specializing in contemporary art
http://www.artspiral.org/
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Please select the little spirals to enter
AAAC fights to Keep 26 Bowery

22. Asian American Arts Centre
The Asian American arts Centre presents an exhibition entitled, Meiling Hom / Jian-jun Zhang. This is the sixth in an annual series focused on recognizing
http://www.artspiral.org/current.html
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Ken Fukushima
"Site of Mendacity, Landscape with a Tear - detail"
ink, chalk, pastel on paper
What's New
Calendar
CURRENT EXHIBITION
Asian American Arts Centre
Presents
O R G A N I Z E D S P A C E S
August 26 - September 9, 2005
Opening Reception: Thursday, September 8th, 6:00 - 8:00 p.m. Left: Su-en Wong, "Shy Green," 2004 Right: Jason Wee, "Wish You Were Here" (Series of 5), 2005 A special kick-off exhibition, prelude to AAAC's 05-06 exhibition season, presents Singaporean artists based in New York. Sponsored by the Permanent Mission of Singapore to the United Nations as it marks its 40th year of independence, this exhibition is curated by Meridith McNeal. Organized Spaces is a group show featuring emerging artists working in a wide range of media influenced by multiple cultural and sociopolitical contexts. Among the 20 smallest countries in the world, Singapore faces the challenge of managing its society within a very small landmass. Organized Spaces addresses the complex consciousness of space, and the artists represent a society with a cosmopolitan outlook, an island-nation establishing its place in today's world, a culture balancing Eastern and Western values, and a generation attracted to the old and the new. The artists' reception for Organized Spaces will take place on Thursday, September 8 from 6pm to 8pm. The public is welcome. The Guest of Honor is Singapore Ambassador and Permanent Representative to the United Nations, Mr. Vanu Gopala Menon.

23. Asian American Arts And Culture In The San Francisco Bay Area
manja.org is a guide to Asian American arts events in the San Francisco Bay Area.
http://manja.org/
home events links forum ... subscribe
asian american arts and culture in the san francisco bay area
upcoming events updated today Purchase APAture 2005 tickets
MANJA is an independent online guide to local San Francisco Bay Area Asian American arts events.
For a list of upcoming recommended Asian American arts events join our email list. more info the low down updated 9/15 Great article in the SFBG covering the history of Dhamaal . Check out the next show: WORDLY IV Apex Express: Asian Pacific Islander radio, on 94.1 FM, KPFA radio, just launched their new website Vienna Teng will be performing a solo fundraiser show in the Bay Area on Friday, September 24th. APAture 2005 kicks off tonight (Tuesday evening), with the Gallery Opening featuring visual artist Rebecca Szeto . Check out her website SFist interviews comic book artist and musician, Hellen Jo via headphonerecord
The Invisible Cities
are playing a free show today (9/12 @ noon) at 101 California Street as part of the SF People in Plazas Concert Series . Bring your lunch! FPAC 2005 is this weekend down in San Pedro.

24. Asian Arts Initiative
As one of the very few Asian American community arts centers in the country, the Asian arts Initiative is a unique and vital meeting place where artists and
http://www.asianartsinitiative.org/about/history.html
History
Board of Directors

Staff/Interns

Members/Funders

Created in response to community concerns about racial tension, the Asian Arts Initiative began programming in May 1993 with Philadelphia's first-ever Asian American Arts Festival: "Live Traditions/Contemporary Issues" at the Painted Bride Art Center. The Asian Arts Initiative has since expanded to become a community arts center that offers performances, exhibitions, workshops, and training for artists and everyday people who share our mission of community-based arts. We are grounded in the belief that all people have the right to creative expression, and that the arts can provide an important voice for Asian Americans and other groups whose lives and stories are marginalized in our society. As one of the very few Asian American community arts centers in the country, the Asian Arts Initiative is a unique and vital meeting place where artists and everyday people can think critically and creatively about the experiences of Asian Americans. 10th Anniversary Timeline : The Asian Arts Initiative is created at the Painted Bride Art Center in response to community concerns about racial tension.

25. Asian American Media Arts
Asian American Media arts. New and Exciting! Asian American arts Foundation University Film Video Association. Film/Videomakers Websites
http://www.english.udel.edu/feng/aam.html
Asian American Media Arts New and Exciting!
    Check out the brand new site for streaming video featuring Asian American programming: Aiyaa! Media Greg ("Fighting Grandpa") Pak has set up a new website devoted to promoting Asian American Film . Greg is also one of the founders of The Workshop which also has a great site.
Indexes and Databases
  • Canadian Filmmaker's Distribution Center - Database of 16mm and Video Distributors for Canadian Filmmakers
  • ITVS - the Independent Television Service website features information on many films and videos that aired on PBS, including links to their commercial distributors.
Distributors and Media Arts Organizations Film and Arts Festivals

26. Asian American Artists Collective
AAAC is a collaborative network of diverse Asian American voices dedicated to Through the arts, AAAC works to confront, subvert and disrupt stereotypes,
http://www.thecollectivechicago.org/
ABOUT US Founded on August 21, 2001 by Asian Pacific Islander American (APIA) artists from the Chicagoland area, the ASIAN AMERICAN ARTISTS COLLECTIVE (AAAC) is committed to creating intersections between art, audience, and activism. AAAC is a collaborative network of diverse Asian American voices dedicated to artistic development, support, and empowerment. Through the arts, AAAC works to confront, subvert and disrupt stereotypes, discrimination, prejudice, and oppression from the outside and inside of our communities. CALENDAR PROGRAMS PUBLICATIONS LINKS/RESOURCES ... CONTACT US We achieve our goals through the dynamic tension between audience, art and activism. Although we self-identify as APIA (Asian Pacific Islander American) we simultaneously redefine the term to be inclusive of West Asian (Middle Eastern), South Asian, and Multi-Racial peoples. Through programs such as YAWP, Mango Tribe, Kitchen Poems, and Project A, we build solidarity across APIA communities, other communities of color, and beyond. Allying ourselves with other community owned resources, we seek to nurture individual and collaborative multi-disciplinary artistic expression by providing a space for creation, exhibition, and networking amongst APIA artists and the community at large. We embrace art as a valid and proactive response to the silence and injustice in our society, challenging ourselves and others to work towards social change.

27. Re: 911 - A Multimedia Response
She is one of the cofounders and editors of Lantern, an Asian American arts Literally Journal, a proud member of the Asian American Artists Collective,
http://www.thecollectivechicago.org/re911/bios.html
Michelle Alba
Michelle Alba is mainly a visual artist who has contributed drawings, photography and paintings to the various endeavors of the Asian American Artists Collective, from the literary journal MONSOON in 1995 to the Mediums and CHOP shows in 2001. In addition, she was co-editor of MONSOON in 1998. Currently, besides helping to build the artistic community of the collective, Michelle is part of the technical crew for the Mango Tribe and a creative mentor in the Redmoon Theater's Dramagirls program. Julius Cavira
Sam del Rosario
Sam del Rosario is a native Chicagoan and has never lived more than an hour's drive from where he was born. He is a graduate of the Second City Writing Program and has studied at the Improv Olympic, the Annoyance Theater, and the University of Chicago. He would like to give a shout out to his parents and asks that someone explain to them what a shout out is. Anida Rouquiyah Yoeu Esguerra
Marlon Unas Esguerra
Marlon Unas Esguerra is a second generation Filipino American, born and raised in the Old Wicker Park area of Chicago. Raised in a strict Roman Catholic home, Marlon converted to Islam shortly after college. He is a co-founder of the Collective, and the National APIA Spoken Word and Poetry Summit. 2002 marks Marlon's third year teaching poetry and creative writing for Young Chicago Authors, implementing programs in the Chicago Public Schools, Chicago Alternative High School system, Gallery 37 Program for the Arts and the Cook County Juvenile Detention Center. In June, Marlon will launch YAWP: YOUNG ASIANS WITH POWER, a youth program for APIA teens sponsored by the Collective.

28. AsiaSource: AsiaLINKS - A Resource Of The Asia Society
Links to websites promoting Asian American Media arts. Asian CineVision (ACV), a nonprofit Asian American media arts center, encourages the development
http://www.asiasource.org/links/al_mp_03.cfm?TID=21,24

29. AsiaSource: AsiaLINKS - A Resource Of The Asia Society
The Asian American arts Aliance is a New Yorkbased organization dedicated Asian American arts Foundation Information on this Bay Area foundation s 1997
http://www.asiasource.org/links/al_mp_03.cfm?TID=583

30. Asian American Links
The Asian American arts Aliance is a New Yorkbased organization dedicated to increasing the support, recognition and appreciation of Asian American arts.
http://www.askasia.org/navigation/Links/AsAm.htm

Asian American Studies

Film

Education

History (Asia Nation in online communities)
...
Art Scene China

This website features artworkby some of China's leading avant-garde artists as well as exciting, up-and-coming Chinese artists. Asian American Artistry in Film and Music
This site includes articles, special features, and resources, on issues regarding Asian Pacific American artists. Asian American Art Alliance
The Asian American Arts Aliance is a New York-based organization dedicated to "increasing the support, recognition and appreciation of Asian American Arts." The site includes a summary of their history, a calendar of local events in various artistic pursuits, and information on its programs and services. Asian American Rising
This site profiles Asian American artists, presenting their background and musical specialty. You can select featured artists from 1996 to 1999. There is also a links page that focuses on Asian Americans in entertainment. Asian American Writers' Workshop
This New York-based nonprofit organization is dedicated to the creation, publication and distribution of Asian American literature.

31. Asian American Net: Asian Organizations
Asian American arts Alliance, New York A nonprofit service organization Asian American arts Foundation (AAAF) A Northern California based non-profit
http://www.asianamerican.net/org_main.html
Home Asia in General Central Asia East Asia ... Who's Who of Asian Americans [The following Asian American organizations are listed under specific nationality/country pages] Arab Organizations
Chinese Organizations

Hmong Americans

Japanese Organizations
...
  • ACCESS: Arab Community Center for Economic and Social Services . A human services organization, provides a wide range of social, mental health, educational, artistic, employment, legal and medical services. APEX: Asian Professional Exchange . To serve young Asian American professionals who can explore new career paths, meet peers and leaders. Arizona Asian American Association . To provide an open forum for all Asians where they can express and share their concerns, problems and achievements. Asia Hands . Founded in 1997, Asia Hands is a non profit social networking group for professionals of all ages and nationality who have previously lived and worked in the Asia region. Asia Source . An online resource developed by the Asia Society to meet the need for timely, reliable, unbiased information and assistance regarding the cultural, economic, social, historical, and political dimensions of Asia. Asian Wind . Bridging East and West in Business Technology and Culture. Asian American Arts Alliance , New York: A non-profit service organization dedicated to increasing the support, recognition and appreciation of Asian American arts.

32. Biography Of
Robert Lee is the Executive Director of Asian American arts Centre Robert was a founding Board member (1983) of the Asian American arts Alliance of New
http://www.asianamerican.net/bios/Lee-Robert.html
Robert Lee Robert Lee is the Executive Director of Asian American Arts Centre ( www.artspiral.org ) which is embarking on its 28th year of community programming. He initiated the Arts Centre's visual arts programming in 1978 drawing attention to Asian American artists work as a field of special study. He initiated the first public Archive for Asian American Artists in the United States encompassing 1100 artists to date. In 1986 he completed the first overview of the art by Asian American artists, a one hour slide show production entitled, "The Art of Asian American Artists: Reflections of the Cultural Issues in Asian American Life", which was shown at conferences and on numerous campuses including the National Museum of American Art in Washington DC. Many well known artists today were exhibited by him at the Arts Centre early in their career such as: Ik Joong Kang, Mel Chin, Byron Kim, Ming Fay, Ti Shan Hsu, Albert Chong, Tseng Kwong Chi, Martin Wong, Zhang Hongtu, Yong Soon Min, Kip Fulbeck, Paul Wong, David Y. Chung, Zarina Hashmi, Toshio Sasaki, Dinh Le, and Yeong Gill Kim. Other well known artists who have shown at the Arts Centre are: Xu Bing, Alfonso Ossorio, Wenda Gu, Chen Zhen, Krishna Reddy, Ushio Shinohara, Matsumi Kanemitsu, Choong Sup Lim, Nam June Paik, as well as Kenneth Noland, Vito Acconci, Barbara Kruger, Agnes Denes, Leon Golub, Lilliana Porter, Luis Camnitzer, Howardina Pindell, Faith Ringgold, etc.

33. Stanford Humanities Lab Projects Asian-American Art
asianamerican Art, California Confluences and Crosscurrents. A study and interpretation of visual art production by individuals of Asian ancestry in the
http://shl.stanford.edu/research/asianamericanart.html
Home Mission History Projects ... Contact
Asian-American Art, California Confluences and Crosscurrents.
A study and interpretation of visual art production by individuals of Asian ancestry in the United States from the mid-19th century to 1965.
Chiura Obata, Setting Sun, Sacramento Valley, 1927/1928, color woodcut on paper, 15 3/4 x 11 in., printed by Tadeo Takamigawa, Tokyo, private collection, San Franciso
Project Description:
"AsianAmericanArt: California Confluences and Crosscurrents" is the most comprehensive study and interpretation ever undertaken of the history of visual art production by individuals of Asian ancestry (Chinese, Japanese, Filipino, Korean and South Asian) in the United States from the mid-19th century to 1965. Already fully collaborative in structure, the project involves scholars from fields including American and Asian histories and art histories, Ethnic Studies, and Women's Studies. Over the last decade, a research team involving specialists from institutions including the Smithsonian Institution Archives of American Art, San Francisco State University, University of California at Los Angeles, and Stanford University, aided by more than fifty student interns, formed the foundation for this project. Research results now fill more than twenty linear feet of files, comprising the most comprehensive and largest resource about Asian-American art available anywhere. Using this archival research, the project has now move into an "Interpretive Phase" based at Stanford University. A major publication resulting from this research will be available in fall 2007. A touring exhibition jointly organized by Stanford University, the Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco, and the Los Angeles County Museum of Art will open in 2007 as well.

34. People On Campus For March 2001
Irene Poon Anderson Leading the Way for asian-american art history Leading the Way features the art of 25 asian-american artists from 1930-1970,
http://www.sfsu.edu/~news/firstmon/mar01/marpeop.htm
People On Campus is published in FirstMonday by the Public Affairs and Publications offices at SFSU. 415/338-1665. pubcom@sfsu.edu
People On Campus
Irene Poon Anderson - 'Leading the Way' for Asian-American art history
During her 36 years as slide curator in San Francisco State University's Art Department, Irene Poon Andersen has done much more than manage small squares of film in order. "Irene is one of the most importantscholars in the developing field of Asian-American art history and is helping situate San Francisco State University at ground zero for the field," says Mark Johnson, director of SFSU's Fine Art Gallery. "She is modest, gracious and also quite brilliant." With Johnson and two others, Andersen co-curated "With New Eyes: Toward an Asian American Art History in the West," a groundbreaking exhibition at the Fine Arts Gallery in 1995. After the conclusion of "With New Eyes," SFSU art Professor Whitney Chadwick suggested that someone should document these artists "before they're all gone" and convinced Andersen - an Asian-American artist herself - that she was the ideal candidate. The result is "Leading the Way: Asian American Artists of the Older Generation," a book that Andersen hopes will help fill the gap of Asian-American art excluded from art history textbooks. "The 'With New Eyes' exhibition made me realize the potential strength and breadth of work created by Asian-American artists, and I believe it is imperative that this is documented," she says. "I hope this book will help solidify these artists' place in American art history."

35. FC-New York - Spotlight On - Asian American Arts Alliance
Mission The mission of the Asian American arts Alliance is to engage the general public with Asian American arts by ensuring that Asian American artists
http://fdncenter.org/newyork/spotlight/ny_spotlight_061303.html
June 13, 2003
Organization Name:
Asian American Arts Alliance
Year Founded:
Contact Person:
Lillian Cho
Address: 74 Varick Street, Suite 302, New York, NY
Phone:
Fax:
Email:
info@aaartsalliance.org
Website Address: http://www.aaartsalliance.org Mission: The mission of the Asian American Arts Alliance is to engage the general public with Asian American arts by ensuring that Asian American artists and arts organizations thrive. Background: We are a 20 year-old umbrella art service organization that represents nearly 2,000 Asian American arts/cultural organizations and artists throughout the five boroughs of New York City. Through our programs and services, the Arts Alliance reaches approximately 25,000 people per year; and over 100,000 visitors per year gain information on Asian American arts groups and activities and resources. Formed in 1983, the Arts Alliance is the only pan-Asian, multi-disciplinary arts service organization in the country providing a centralized information network, vital funding resources, technical assistance, showcasing, and ongoing advocacy services for this growing community. Based in Manhattan, the Arts Alliance serves residents in all five boroughs of NYC. Current Programs: Information Services
The Arts Alliance is a central hub for information about its constituents, the field, the Asian American arts community, and opportunities that may benefit its community. As a service to the general public, we respond to daily inquiries and requests for referrals that come to us by phone, fax, email, and our website. We provide regular print and online publications that deliver and distribute this information including:

36. PND Funding For Arts - Cultural Diversity Resources
Asian American arts Allinace http//www.aaartsalliance.org Asian American arts Alliance was founded in 1983 by a group of artists, activists, and community
http://fdncenter.org/pnd/specialissues/content.jhtml?id=34400040

37. KSW : Resources : Links
Asian American arts Alliance a NYCbased non-profit arts organization. Asian American Theatre Company a new Asian American arts venue in SF s Japantown
http://www.kearnystreet.org/resources/links/
@import url(/css/bgcolor-mango.css); About KSW Programs Resources
Links
Website links to arts organizations, artists, art spaces, publications and others, both APA and general arts interest. Links will open in new windows. (Have a link? a site.)
Asian Pacific American Arts and Literary Organizations
Arkipelago (New York City)
cultural organization that, through the arts, encourages critical dialogue and community involvement in issues that concern Filipinos worldwide Artwallah (Los Angeles)
South Asian diasporic arts festival Asian American Artists Collective (Chicago)
goals of The Collective include education, advocacy, and organizing using the arts. Asian American Arts Alliance
a NYC-based non-profit arts organization Asian American Theatre Company
San Francisco's professional theater company developing and supporting Asian Pacific Islander American actors, playwrights, designers and technicians. Asian American Women's Artists Association
a Bay Area, intergenerational, pan-Asian network for emerging and established Asian American women artists Asian American Writers' Workshop
a resource for writers, readers and publishers on literature written by Asians living in America. AAWW is based in New York City.

38. The Columbia Chronicle Online - Asian-American Art, Music And Dance Highlighted
asianamerican Art, Music and Dance highlighted in New World, New Art Festival at Navy Pier. By Martina Sheehan Staff Writer
http://www.ccchronicle.com/back/99summer/ae99.html
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312-344-8032 (fax) Visit Columbia College Chicago Asian-American Art, Music and Dance highlighted in 'New World, New Art' Festival at Navy Pier By Martina Sheehan Staff Writer Strings of white paper cranes dangled in the background as members of the H.T. Chen dance group glided gracefully across the stage in a well-received performance at Navy Pier's Skyline Stage in early August. Sponsored by Columbia's Center for Asian Arts and Media, the performance was part the "New World, New Art" festival, a two day tribute to Asians and Asian-Americans in the creative disciplines. The event included a variety of acts ranging form hip-hop turntablist DJ Shortkut of the well-known Invisibl Skratch Piklz to 17 year old violin virtuoso Jennifer Cheung.

39. IC / US
Fresh Talk, Daring Gazes Conversations on Asian American Art Yellow Light The Flowering of Asian American arts Edited by Amy Ling
http://www.indiana.edu/~libugls/multicultural/asianamerican_arts.html
IC / Undergraduate Services IUB LIB. Home Undergraduate Services Cultural Resources Asian Americans in the Arts
Asian American Influence in American Fine Arts
A List of Resources
Cultural Resources at the IUB Libraries
Performing Arts Visual Arts
An Exhibit of Works by Delaware Artists of Asian/Pacific Descent
Dover Art League
Main Library, Folklore Collection, Stacks
N 6538.A83 D68 1997
Art, Women, California 1950-2000: Parallels and Intersections
Edited by Diana Burgess Fuller and Daniela Salvioni
Fine Arts Library, Reserves
N 8354 .A73 2002 At the Crossroads: Celebrating the Centennial of Korean Immigration to the U.S. : Twenty Contemporary New York Artists
Korean Cultural Service
Fine Arts Library, Stacks N 6538.K67 2003

40. Art Journal: Why Asia? Contemporary Asian And Asian American Art - Review
Full text of the article, Why Asia? Contemporary Asian and Asian American Art Review from Art Journal, a publication in the field of arts
http://www.findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m0425/is_4_57/ai_53747244
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Save a personal copy of this article and quickly find it again with Furl.net. It's free! Save it. Alice Yang. Ed by Jonathan Hay and Mimi Young. New York: New York University Press, 1998. 152 pp., 71 b/w ills., $ 19.95. This volume collects twenty-one essays and reviews by Yang on contemporary Asian and Asian American artists from the nineties. (A prolific output considering that the author was also working on her Ph.D. in art history at New York University's Institute of Fine Arts at the time.) As a whole these reviews and essays map out the complexities and contradictions of the critical terrain on Asian and Asian American art. Although Yang's work focused on Asian and Asian American artists, the questions and issues she investigated are relevant to anyone considering the relationship between issues of identity and contemporary art. Moreover, her emphasis on individual artists and her careful reading of their work offers a model for critical writing that goes beyond a multicultural politics of inclusion to give in-depth consideration to the artwork itself.

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