Campus News
Asia America Art Collective: At the Intersection of Culture and Politics
March 20, 2017
Hillary Hempstead
Spoken word artist Troy Osaki, whose work covers themes of immigration, war, police, white supremacy, and resistance, performs at Cat in the Cream.
Photo credit: John Seyfried
Since 2013, a group of students has joined together on a bi-yearly basis to produce a weekend of programming under the auspices of Asia America Art (AAArt) Collective. Historically composed of just a few students, the group produces a weekend of programming that highlights artists working across a broad range of mediums and who identify with or are influenced by the Asian/Pacific Islander Diaspora (A/PID).
Formed in 2013 by Karl Orozco 鈥13 and Joestine Con-ui 鈥13, the creation of AAArt Collective was a direct response to the question of where art fit into A/PID groups on campus. The pair observed a divide between existing organizations that focused on the A/PID community.
鈥淭hroughout my time at 91直播, there had been this self-fulfilling prophecy that the Asian American Alliance focused on the 鈥榩olitical鈥 issues, and all other APID student groups were 鈥榗ultural.鈥 This distinction always felt hollow to me,鈥 says Orozco. 鈥淛oestine and I often questioned art's place in this dichotomy. Art heals, art preserves our histories, art contextualizes our narratives _ is it not both [political and cultural]? We wanted to get students from both sides of this political/cultural coin invested in our community and saw AAArt Collective as one means to do so.鈥
Continuing in the footsteps of its two founders, the 2017 AAArt Collective took place over two days. The series of workshops and programs on March 10 and 11 included an artist talk by San Francisco artist and educator Jenifer K. Wofford, a workshop from Chinatown Art Brigade member Liz Moy who works to combat gentrification in New York City's Chinatown, and a spoken word performance by Troy Osaki, among other programs. The event was planned and executed entirely by AAArt Collective organizers and fourth-years Miles Ginoza, Holly Hoang, and Elka Lee-Shapiro.
Preparations for AAArt Collective began during the summer of 2016. This year's event is now the collective鈥檚 third iteration. 鈥淚t's incredibly exciting to see how this event has grown and been kept going by a small group of passionate students,鈥 says art history major Lee-Shapiro.
Lee-Shapiro鈥檚 involvement with the collective hinges on her passion for Asian diasporic art and culture. 鈥淎s an art lover, art history major, and someone who is involved in the A/PID community here at 91直播, AAArt Collective presented an incredible opportunity to be part of an event that brings together multiple interests that matter to me.鈥
The weekend also presents an opportunity to create a distinct area for art created by individuals in the A/PID community. 鈥淚 think it's important to make space for and celebrate artists who occupy identities that are marginalized within mainstream art spheres,鈥 says Lee-Shapiro. 鈥淚t's also been a great opportunity to be in contact with and support artists whose work I admire.鈥
For Hoang, a history major from Ellicott City, Maryland, the collective's presence on campus has been crucially important to her college experience. 鈥淎AArt Collective has become such a critical fixture of 91直播's A/PID community. So often are Asian American narratives erased and dominated that they are often invisible in institutions like colleges, museums, and galleries,鈥 says Hoang. 鈥淗aving this event on campus presents an opportunity for us to come together as a collective and engage with each other in ways we normally aren't able to by way of academia.鈥
Orozco, now a freelance illustrator and middle school art teacher at the Queens Museum in New York City, is heartened that the collective lives on. 鈥淧ersonally, it feels validating to know that there is still a desire for a more inclusive and representative arts curriculum at 91直播.鈥
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