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CALIFAS: Exhibition in San Francisco

Exhibition_Califas_Intersection_for_the_Arts

Califas Exhibition

Reception: Califas Festival Opening Ceremony & Reception: Wednesday October 2, 6pm
Exhibition: October 2 – December 21, 2013

Where: 925 Mission Street SF CA 94103
Gallery Hours: Tuesdays – Saturdays, 12–6pm, FREE

If California were a country, as of 2012 it would have been the 9th largest economy and the 34th most populous nation in the world. California is the most populous state in the United States, home to 1 out of 8 Americans. This exhibition is inspired by the countless stories and people that make up the state – from the Homeless Garden Project in Santa Cruz to residents a block away on the corner of 6th and Mission Streets, from a senior synchronized swimming team in Orange County to a youth Scraper Bike Team in East Oakland. Califas features work by Andrea Blum, California is a Place: A Documentary Project by Drea Cooper & Zackary Canepari, Mia Nakano, Joan Osato, Joel Daniel Phillips, SF Postcard Project, and Jenifer K. Wofford & Kyle Herbert.

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Revolve: Art and Social Change Symposium

Visibility Project Director, Mia Nakano, is speaking in Philadelphia on October 5th at the Leeway Foundation’s “Revolve: Art and Social Change Symposium“.

Join us on Saturday, October 5, for a day-long event that will convene artists, activists, cultural workers, organizers, scholars, and community leaders to celebrate examples from the past two decades where artists and cultural producers have connected their practice to social change movements.

The day will consist of a keynote presentation, three plenary sessions, and pop-up performances. Session topics include: “Claiming Space: Community to Museum”, “Embedded in Community: What Is Social Practice?” and “Hybridism: Artists as Activists”.

Panelist Bios

anonymous bodies art collective is an interdisciplinary performance company co-directed by Kate Watson-Wallace and Jaamil Olawale Kosoko, based in New York and Philadelphia. As a collective, the two co-directors create work independently and collaboratively, creating an array of art projects, that range from solo performances in gallery settings, to larger performance installations on-site. It is a project-based company that collaborates with a diverse group of dancers, visual artists, musicians, stylists, and DJs. It draws upon the traditions of visual art, post-modern dance, site-specific study, conceptual and performance art, audience participation and public spectacle. Known for their creative use of ordinary space, anonymous bodies “has a gift for making pockets of space feel infinite. Wild imagination ruled.” (The New York Times)

Bayeté Ross Smith is an artist, photographer, and educator living in New York City. He is represented by beta pictoris gallery/Maus Contemporary. He began his career as a photojournalist with the Knight Ridder Newspaper Corporation. Bayeté has exhibited with organizations and institutions such as the San Francisco Arts Commission, the Brooklyn Museum, the Oakland Museum of California, MoMA P.S.1, Duetsche Bank, Rush Arts Gallery, the Leica Gallery, the Utah MOCA, the Patricia Sweetow Gallery, the Goethe Institute (Ghana), and Zacheta National Gallery of Art (Poland). His collaborative projects Along The Way and Question Bridge: Black Males have shown at the 2008 and 2012 Sundance Film Festival, respectively. His work has also been featured at the Sheffield Doc Fest in Sheffield England and the L.A. Film Festival. Bayeté is currently the Associate Program Director for Kings against Violence Initiative, a violence prevention non-profit organization in New York that has a partnership with Kings County Hospital in Brooklyn.

Detroit based artist and activist Invincible’s spitfire wordplay has received acclaim from fans all across the world, while their active involvement in progressive social change has taken their music beyond entertainment toward actualizing the change they wish to see. As a co-founder of EMERGENCE Media, they released their debut album ShapeShifters (2008) and produced award winning videos like The Revival (2009) about women in hip-hop, and Locusts (2008) exploring displacement and gentrification in Detroit. In addition to their work as a performing artist, for the last decade Invincible has worked with Detroit Summer, they were also the co-coordinator and co-founder of the Detroit Future Youth Network to support. Invincible is currently working with renown producer Waajeed (Bling47/DIRT TECH RECK), multimedia artist and creative technologist Carlos Garcia, and visual artist Wesley Taylor on Complex Movements, an interactive multimedia installation based hip-hop collective exploring the relationship between complex sciences and social justice movements.

Jeff Chang is the author of the forthcoming book, Who We Be: The Colorization of America, and the American Book Award-winning Can’t Stop Won’t Stop: A History of the Hip-Hop Generation. He serves at the Executive Director of the Institute for Diversity in the Arts at Stanford University. He has been a co-founder of ColorLines, The Culture Group, and CultureStr/ke.

Jesus Barraza is an activist printmaker based in San Leandro, California. Using bold colors and high contrast images, his prints reflect both his local and global community and their resistance in a struggle to create a new world. Jesus has worked closely with numerous community organizations to create prints that visualize struggles for immigration rights, housing, education, and international solidarity. Printmaking has allowed Jesus to produce relevant images that can be put back into the hands of his community and spread throughout the world. He believes that through this work and the work of Dignidad Rebelde, he is playing a role in keeping the history of graphic art activism alive.

L.J. Roberts is a textile artist and writer living in Brooklyn, NY. Their studio practice consists of large-scale knitted installations created with children’s toy knitting machines, jacquard weavings, and incredibly detailed embroideries. L.J’s work explores the intersections of feminism, queer and trans politics, activism, on-going AIDS, community, and protest. Most recently their work was included in 40 Under 40: Craft Futures at The Renwick Gallery of The Smithsonian Museum of American Art and Not Over: 25 Years of Visual AIDS at La Mama Galleria in New York City. Currently, L.J.’s work is on view in the exhibition Alien She at The Miller Gallery at Carnegie Mellon University. Alien She will travel to Vox Populi in Philadelphia, Yerba Buena Center for The Arts in San Francisco and the Pacific Northwest College of Art in Portland. Their work will also be included in the forthcoming show Disobedient Objects at the Victoria and Albert Museum in London in 2014. L.J. maintains a critical writing practice that bridges craft and queer theory. Their writing can be found in the anthology Extra/Ordinary: Craft Culture in Contemporary Art published by Duke University Press. They have a forthcoming essay that discusses the on-going AIDS epidemic and craft tactics in an anthology on Craftivism to be published by Arsenal Press in the Spring of 2014

Marlène Ramírez-Cancio is an interdisciplinary artist from Puerto Rico who co-founded and co-directs Fulana, a Latina video collective based in New York City. Using parody and satire as a critical tool, Fulana’s mock television commercials, music videos and print pieces respond to the ways ideologies and identities are marketed through the mass media. The collective’s works have been shown internationally at film festivals, museums, universities and online at fulana.org. Marlène is also Associate Director, Arts & Media, at the Hemispheric Institute of Performance and Politics, a transnational network of institutions, artists, scholars, and activists across the Americas. Housed at NYU, the Institute promotes interdisciplinary collaborations at the level of artistic practice and pedagogy, builds collections of artistic and academic materials for research across borders, and aims to train the next generation of performance-based political artists.

Melanie Cervantes aims to translate the hopes and dreams of justice movements into images that are life affirming and inspire people to take action. She is best known for her prolific production of political screen prints and posters. Employing vibrant colors and hand-drawn illustrations, her work moves those viewed as marginal to the center – featuring powerful youth, elders, women, and queer and indigenous peoples. With her partner and fellow printmaker Jesus Barraza, she formed Dignidad Rebelde, a collaborative graphic arts project. Dignidad Rebelde produces art intended to transform people’s stories into a radical visual language, which is then returned to those who initially inspired it. Working primarily as poster artists, Dignidad Rebelde continues an important artistic tradition deeply rooted in popular social movements throughout the Americas.

As Executive Director, Michelle Coffey designs, implements and furthers the strategic agenda, leadership and vision of Lambent Foundation. Through innovative grant making and projects, Lambent Foundation supports the intersections of contemporary arts and culture as critical strategies for social change. Lambent’s global grant making provides critical general operating support for artist-centered organizations in the visual, performance and alternative media fields in New York, New Orleans and Nairobi.

Ryann Makenzi Holmes is a black-feminist, and self identified boi. Born in the nations capital, and raised in nearby PG county, Maryland, she’s called Brooklyn home for the last decade. In 2009, she founded the bklyn boihood and she is currently the Director of Community Programming at the Museum of Contemporary African Diasporan Arts (MoCADA), in Brooklyn. She completed undergrad at George Mason University, and graduated from Baruch College’s MBA Entrepreneurship program in 2011. Ryann has been featured in numerous publications, was named one of Go Magazine’s ‘Top 100 Women We Love’, and ranked as Velvet Park’s ‘Top 25 Significant Queer Women of the Year’.

Roya Rastegar is a scholar, artist and curator living between Philadelphia and L.A. She has served as the co-director of the Santa Cruz Women of Color Film & Video Festival, worked at Sundance, Tribeca, and the L.A. Film Festivals, and held a curatorial fellowship at the Whitney Museum ISP. She recently received a Creative Capital grant in the Emerging Fields, and is the co-writer of Wildness (2012), which premiered at MoMA’s Doc Fortnight Film Festival and won a Grand Jury Prize at Outfest. Her articles on film culture have appeared in The Nation, The Huffington Post, ColorLines Magazine, and The Feminist Wire. She is currently a postdoctoral fellow and visiting professor at Bryn Mawr College.

Shelley Spector is an artist, curator and teacher. Her multidisciplinary works that explore common themes like money, relationships, tools of measurement and the environment are part of many private and public collections. She founded SPECTOR Gallery/Projects in 1999, working to champion emerging talent and new concepts. An offshoot of the program is Artjaw.com, an online anthology of first person stories from the Philadelphia art community.

Dr. Yaba Blay is a researcher and scholar of Africana Studies and Women’s & Gender Studies. She received a BA in Psychology (Cum Laude) from Salisbury State University, a M.Ed. in Counseling Psychology from the University of New Orleans, an M.A. and Ph.D. in African American Studies and a Graduate Certificate in Women’s Studies from Temple University. Among her many publications, Yaba’s ethnographic case study entitled Pretty Color and Good Hair: Creole Women of New Orleans and the Politics of Identity is featured in the Hampton Press anthology Blackberries and Redbones: Critical Articulations of Black Hair/Body Politics in Africana Communities (2011). She is currently editing her first book-length manuscript, Yellow Fever: Skin Bleaching and the Politics of Skin Color, which investigates the social practice of skin bleaching in Ghana. Dr. Blay is the recipient of a 2010 Leeway Foundation Art and Change Grant through which she embarked upon (1)ne Drop: Conversations on Skin Color, Race, and Identity, a portrait documentary exploring the intersection of skin color politics and negotiations of Black identity.

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Apogee Journal Article

An editor of the Apogee Journal wrote one of the best articles about the Visibility Project to date. A huge thanks to Cecca Ochoa for the brilliant write up and thank you for your hard work.

ABOUT APOGEE
Apogee was founded by writers of color and international students at Columbia. Our dual purpose is to showcase writers from the periphery and to provide a platform for all writers to thoughtfully engage with issues of race, class, and identity.
Apogee: The point in an object’s orbit farthest from the center.We are writers of fiction, nonfiction and poetry; we have studied literature, languages, political science and development; we have worked in several activist fields and in the publishing industry. We are united by a desire to read and publish fiction, poetry, and creative nonfiction that pushes social boundaries and explores issues of race and cultural diversity.We are eager to publish work that sits at some distance from the mainstream, and most excited by that which seeks to acknowledge, interrogate or disrupt this distance.

A Queer Aperture: Mia Nakano and the Visibility Project

by apogeelit

by Cecca Ochoa,  Editor

Mia Nakano is a photographer, served as the  founding photo editor for Hyphen Magazine, and is currently the lead artist for the Visibility Project. In August, Ochoa met with the photographer in her Oakland home to discuss the project. All images copyright of Mia Nakano, visibilityproject.org.

A thought experiment:
Imagine a body without race or gender. What do you see?
Imagine a body with race and gender. Who do you see?

Last week, Germany announced that it will be the first European nation to put a third gender distinction on birth certificates. Nepal instituted a third gender citizenship certificate earlier this year and Sweden has recently established a third gender pronoun. These are exciting wins for the LGBTQ community whose mainstream US efforts have been ardently and monogamously wed to gay marriage at the expense of issues like trans healthcare and representation for (binary) gender non-conforming individuals.

Outside of the United States’ mainstream LGBT political agenda, these conversations are taking place. The questions that are being asked are not as easy as he or she, or a third or fifth option. Gender does not exist in a vacuum; it seems that in this society every body has a racial identity, a gender, and a sexual orientation. The intersections of these various facets of one’s identity determines one’s access to rights: appropriate health care, mobility, the right to live without the fear of identity-related violence- to name a few well worn examples. The social and political privileges a body experiences is not based on one dimension of identity, but a compendium of many.

The Visibility Project, founded and spearheaded by Mia Nakano, is an effort to engage an identity that includes race, diaspora, gender, and sexuality. The project  aims not only to deconstruct reductive classifications around sexuality and gender, but to contextualize them within the Asian American community.  The project gives a face and a name to an overlooked polis: queer Asian Americans.

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One question that  Nakano asks participants is, “What does visibility mean to you?”

Sasha, a twenty- five year old South Asian New Yorker answers the question: “Being visible means having a presence.  I know for myself, and for the queer API people that I am blessed to have in my life, we are constantly fending for our own presence.”

To Nakano, visibility is a creative act.  “Culture saturates our brains with ideas about  our identity, especially as it relates to race and gender.  To me visibility is about individuals shaping their own visual and actual language to express the specific intersections of who they are, so that other people can see them more clearly. Or, forget other people, so that we can see ourselves more clearly.”

When I asked her what she thought the biggest fight facing the Asian American queer rights movement was, Nakano answered,  “there are so many answers depending on who you ask and where you are. Everything is interconnected. There’s a swell in LGBTQ competency and understanding across many cultures. This means providing language support for people coming out to their loved ones who don’t speak English as their primary language. There’s anti-bullying,  immigration reform, job security, access to health care, addressing racism in non-white communities, and so on. All of these struggles can’t be presented in hierarchy. There is no separating any of our identities. They make up the whole of who we are.”

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Nakano is fourth generation Japanese American. She lives and breathes photography; her one-bedroom rental is covered in photographs. Film and lenses are squirreled away next to the bath towels and her garage has been converted into a fully operational darkroom. As a photographer, she has spent many years framing her identity as a queer Asian American. In 2002, she was the founding photo editor of Hyphen Magazine and also the only out queer person on staff. She made it her business to ensure there was a consistent and meaningful representation of the LGBT community within the magazine.

In 2007, Nakano went to Nepal for a photojournalism internship at the Kathmandu Post. At that time, Nakano said, she was perceived as “quasi-butch, definitely queer,” although she has never subscribed to the butch/femme dichotomy. Concerned for her personal safety, she researched the LGBT community in Nepal and found the Blue Diamond Society, an LGBT group that provided support for people coming out as well as HIV/AIDS services. Surprisingly, Nakano found only one photo of anyone associated with the organization: the Blue Diamond Society’s Executive Director, Sunil Pant. One man seemed to represent the entire queer rights movement in Nepal. Once there, Nakano got to know the other members of the organization, and with their permission, began taking photos of the LGBT community there.

“Once I was back in the US, I wanted to do the same thing that I had been doing in Nepal. At that time, there was extremely limited visual accessibility to the Asian American queer rights movement.” Thus, the Visibility Project started. “The original call out was to a group of friends and community folks to have their photo taken to be a part of a portrait series. The response was a little overwhelming. All of the spaces got filled so quickly that more dates needed to get added in. I went into the project really uncomfortable and nervous. Shooting portraits and working with people was totally new, and I was more focused on that than planning for the future. I just wanted to ensure that my community was documented and visible.”

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Nakano has interviewed public health workers, poets, university professors, sex workers, community elders who were organizing with Harvey Milk and through the AIDS Crisis, and young queers fighting in the Hawaiian sovereignty movement. Nakano has shown the portraits at the Oakland Asian Cultural Center, the Leeway Foundation in Philadelphia, and at the Smithsonian Asian Pacific American Center. As the project has gained momentum, so has her vision.

Over the last seven years, Nakano has documented over 130 female and trans identified Asian Americans in 12 states and 14 cities from Honolulu, Hawaii to Baltimore, Maryland. When she is touring, she sleeps on couches or the spare beds of friends, surrounded by a pile of lighting equipment and camera bags. She usually gives herself two days in a place and schedules to meet with ten to fifteen people per stop.  Her eventual goal is to hit every state, and to compile the Visibility Project into a book with photos and excerpts of interviews translated into the languages of the participants’ heritage.

The book will also contain a glossary of terms that the participants have used or created to self-identify, such as butch, transgender, masculine-of-center, and two-spirit. She hopes this resource will be useful to people coming out as queer or trans, and, for those who are grappling with how to bring the elements of their identity into focus. “There can be something really terrifying about being in a marginalized body and finding no one else around that looks like you. The same goes for asking yourself, ‘who am I?’ and not having the right words to know yourself. This book doesn’t offer any answers, but it will show an enormous diversity of possibilities. ”

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June exhibition + lecture with hotpot! in Philly | 6.21.13 (6-8p)

LEEWAY FOUNDATION EXHIBITION + VISIBILITY PROJECT PANEL WITH HOTPOT!

Excited to announce the first Visibility Project Panel discussion, along with an exhibition, at the Leeway Foundation in Philadelphia. In May 2012, I had the wonderful opportunity to work with several members of a Queer API Women + Trans group in Philadelphia called hotpot!. Four members including Alison Lin, Miki, and Laurent Widjaya will join VP Director Mia Nakano in a discussion about their experiences participating and why this work is needed.

Eight images have been acquired by the Leeway Foundation. They’re also producing a small catalog of the work!

Opening
June 21st, 6p-8p (artist presentation + hotpot! panel)

Exhibition
June 12th – October 4th, 2013

Location
The Philadelphia Building
1315 Walnut Street, Suite 832
Philadelphia, PA 19107

Co-Sponsors

Asian Americans United, Asian Arts Initiative, Boat People SOS – Delaware Valley, hotpot!, Japanese Americans Citizens League – Philadelphia, One Love Movement, Twelve Gates Arts, and the William Way Center.

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Marsha Aizumi | Arcadia, CA

Marsha is an educator and advocate for the LGBT community; a cause she embraced due in large part to the harassment and bullying her son experienced throughout high school. She is currently serving on the Parents, Families, and Friends of Lesbians and Gays (PFLAG) National Board of Directors. In this role, she hopes to change school culture to be more accepting of all students, as well as bring greater resources and support to the Asian Pacific Islander and transgender communities. Marsha is the author of a memoir, Two Spirits, One Heart. Written with her transgender son, Marsha chronicles a mother’s personal journey from fear, uncertainty, and sadness to unconditional love, acceptance, and support of her child.

Ethnicity/Racial Background
Japanese American

Gender
Female

Age
65

Preferred Pronouns
She

Sexual Orientation
Heterosexual

Location
Arcata, 2012

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AAWAA exhibition, April 26th

AAWAA: Hungry Ghost
Hungry Ghost: Yearning for Fulfillment
A Visual and Literary Art Exhibition
Curated by Lisa Chiu

Location
Thoreau Center of Sustainability, Building #1014
Tourney Avenue, San Francisco, CA 94129

Dates of exhibition:
Monday, April 23 – Saturday, June 9, 2012

Opening reception:
Thursday, April 26, 2012, 5-8:30p

Tintypes from the Visibility Project will be on view, along with works from other Asian American Women Artists.

Stephanie Han | Elaine Gin Louie | Mitsuko Brooks | Catherine Uthasoonthorn | Nancy Uyemura | Elizabeth Travelslight | Solongo Tseekhuu | Susan Wingham | Lucy Liew | Wei Ma | Julie Huynh | Vivian Truong | Julia Kuo | Linda Shiue | Rosie Kar | Zilka Joseph | Ganga Dharmappa | Grace Hwang Lynch | Wei Ming Dariotis | Leah Silveius | Sokunthary Svay | Jennifer Cheng | Octavia Baker | Michelle Salnaitis | Leslie Zeitler | Karen Chew | Leslie Kitashima | Pamela Ybanez | Cat Chiu Phillips | Stephanie Yu | Susan Kitazawa | Amy Lam | Choppy Oshiro | Jaimee Itagaki | Linn Chiu | Khay Hembrador | Cynthia Tom | Mia Nakano

Sonoma State lecture, April 26th

Mia Nakano was invited by the Queer Studies department to give a lecture about queer arts, photography, and social change-making at Sonoma State University on Thursday, April 26th.

Queer studies department lecture
12-12:50p

The Ms. Tang Tang Show

On June 23, 2011, as a part of the Queer Cultural Center’s National Queer Arts Festival, two artists created a new live variety/talk show, called the Ms. Tang Tang Show. It was broadcast streaming live all over the US, and a whole slew of Visibility Project participants were a part of the cast and crew. There was also an exhibition of the VP in the main lobby, with over 100 people in attendance. Check out The Ms. Tang Tang Show website for more info.

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Colorlines: Spotlight on Mia Nakano, Redefining Queer/Asian/Female

Spotlight: Mia Nakano
Redefining Queer/Asian/Female
Julianne Hing JUL 1, 2009

When Mia Nakano worked as a photojournalist in Nepal, she observed workshops intended to educate people in the countryside about queer, but primarily lesbian, identities. “I would ask [the facilitators], ‘How do you define the word?’ And every person gave me a different answer,” Nakano recalled. Her questions sparked a debate. Translators argued over terms and interpretations.

Nakano, who is based in the San Francisco Bay area, began wondering about the language people use to define themselves, especially when it comes to race, gender and sexual orientation. And thus, the Visibility Project was born.

Along with collaborator Christine Pan, Nakano has photographed more than 40 people to create a collective portrait of female, trans and gender queer Asian Americans. The series is also tied to surveys and films that document people’s struggles to define their identities beyond a butch/femme dichotomy or an Asian/non-Asian split. The Visibility Project explores the relationships between who we are, what we see and the language we use to describe all of it along the way.

But Nakano had other motives too. “Most of the material on Asian-American queer folks is very intellectualized, heady theses projects that aren’t accessible,” she said. There was always so much text, but never the faces of the people featured in the writing. The Visibility Project was Nakano’s response to that, too—the chance to empower a community to speak for themselves.

For more information, check out visibilityproject.org