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Monday, December 23, 2024 |
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Smithsonian Asian Pacific American Center presents "Sightlines: Chinatown and Beyond" |
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Safety Jacket: A Mourning in Chinatown, 2018. Terence Nicholson. Smithsonian Anacostia Community Museum, 2022.
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WASHINGTON, DC.- The Smithsonian Asian Pacific American Center (APAC) will present its first museum exhibition in a decade with Sightlines: Chinatown and Beyond, opening Sept. 7 at the Smithsonian American Art Museum. The exhibition considers Washington, D.C.s Chinatown as both a geographical focal point and a historical nexus, inviting audiences to take a closer look into Asian Americans contributions to the cultural and built environment of the nations capital.
The exhibitions opening festival is scheduled for Saturday, Sept. 7, 11:30 a.m. to 4 p.m., in the Kogod Courtyard and will feature martial arts presentations, visual arts demonstrations, hands-on craft activities, a discussion with local Asian American chefs, and music and dance performances, including DJ sets. Representatives from local Asian American community organizations will talk with visitors about their work and histories in the area. This event is co-presented by APAC and the Smithsonian American Art Museum.
Sightlines features more than 120 objects, including photographs, architectural drawings, sketchbooks and ephemera drawn from the Smithsonian and local private collections. The exhibition considers creative practices and civic engagement, efforts to preserve and reinterpret heritage and tradition, and the building of communities and coalitions across racial and ethnic boundaries in Washington from the 1970s to the present.
The exhibition underscores the vital role Asian Americans have played in shaping the communities, landscapes and cultures in Washington, D.C., said Yao-Fen You, APACs acting director. We are grateful to the Smithsonian American Art Museum for providing the venue for the presentation of some of these compelling and often overlooked stories. The museums location in D.C.s Chinatown is perfect as an entry point for visitors to learn about our capital city from different perspectives.
Guest curated by Sojin Kim from the Smithsonians Center for Folklife and Cultural Heritage with support from Adriel Luis, APACs curator of digital and emerging practice, and Mia Owens, curatorial assistant, Sightlines offers new vantage points on the cultural imprint of Asian Americans on the city through three narratives explored in the shows three primary sections:
Making Place illuminates efforts to increase Chinatowns visibility in the 1970s and 80s, a period in which its survival was threatened. Architectural drawings by Alfred H. Liu, who designed the Friendship Arch marking the entrance to Chinatown, and archival materials related to the Eastern Wind Collective, a grassroots organization devoted to building pan-ethnic solidarity among Asian ethnic groups, are highlights of this section. While Liu sought to safeguard Chinatown by creating a newly built environment that would emphasize its Asian heritage and attract international visitors, Eastern Winds strategy looked to the past to reinforce a sense of community.
Transforming Tradition examines Asian martial arts as vehicles for self-expression and community building. Several schools and styles of martial arts flourished in Washington during the 70s, resulting in the formation of a racially and ethnically diverse lineage of practitioners that continues today. Clothing, badges, trophies, photographs and artwork that chart the fascinating rise, spread and impact of martial arts in the city and beyond are highlighted in this section. It also tells the story of Simba Dojang, a tae kwon do school whose successes earned it the accolade of the winningest team.
Visualizing Identity centers on the work of MISS CHELOVE (aka Cita Sadeli), a contemporary Washington artist who draws inspiration from her Indonesian mothers heritage and uses the tools and methods of graffiti and street art to claim space for multiple communities. Throughout the city, MISS CHELOVEs vibrant murals celebrate her multicultural identity and her deep community connections that aim to encourage reflection on personal and communal obligations to cultural traditions. Original artwork and objects from the artists personal collection offer insight into how she connects the dots across the communities with whom she identifies.
The exhibition, which was designed by the award-winning firm TSKP x IKD and will run through Nov. 30, 2025, will have a companion website featuring education resources and a digital Atlas with content on a range of other sightlines into Asian American histories and experiences in the city. Recurring public programming will be produced in conjunction with the exhibition during its run.
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