Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
It was originally organized by The Contemporary Museum, Honolulu and known as “The Contemporary Museum Biennial of Hawaii Artists”. [1] In 2011, The Contemporary Museum, Honolulu became part of the Honolulu Museum of Art, [2] with the latter institution continuing the biennial. The following is a list of participating artists: Biennial I (1993)
The title of the 2019 Biennial, To Make Wrong / Right / Now, was taken from the poem Manifesto by participating Kanaka Maoli artist 'Imaikalani Kalahele. [14] The 2019 Honolulu Biennial featured 47 artists based in and around the Pacific, and was curated by Nina Tonga, Josh Tengan (assistant curator), and Devon Bella (curatorial consultant). [15]
[5] [6] Chun is one of the first Native Hawaiian artists to exhibit in the Venice Biennale in 2015. [4] Among the locations that have displayed Chun's work are the Museum of Arts and Design, [3] the Venice Biennale, [4] the Biennial of Hawaii Artists at the Contemporary Museum in Honolulu, the Honolulu Academy of Arts, [2] and the Wing Luke ...
Mar. 28—Hawaii artists are beginning to celebrate the easing of the pandemic with a small-scale "soft " return of First Friday. At least three galleries in Chinatown plan to hold special events ...
Patrick Ching (born c. 1963), conservationist and wildlife artist, ornithological illustrator, and children's book author; Louis Choris (1795–1828), German–Russian painter and explorer; Henry B. Christian (1883–1953), painter; Ernest William Christmas (1863–1918), Australian painter; Edward Clifford (1844–1907), English artist and author
Oct. 29—Honolulu Star-Advertiser cartoonist Jon J. Murakami is one of 23 island artists whose work will be on display Friday when "Comic Jam Hawaii : Talk Story, Draw Story " opens at the ...
Kapulani Landgraf (born 1966) is a Kanaka Maoli (native Hawaiian) artist who is best known for her work in black-and-white photography. Through a series of photographic essays, objects, and installations, Landgraf celebrates Native Hawaiian culture while also addressing the legacies of colonialism and its impact on indigenous Hawaiian rights ...
Other artists have contended with the same issue of art made in China, the Philippines and other countries, brought into the U.S. and offered by unscrupulous or unsuspecting dealers.