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Full-Text Articles in Arts and Humanities
Art Work - “Loving: Elena Rubin” And “Loving: Shoshanna Weinberger”, Laura Kina
Art Work - “Loving: Elena Rubin” And “Loving: Shoshanna Weinberger”, Laura Kina
Laura Kina
OTHER TONGUES: MIXED-RACE WOMEN SPEAK OUT is an anthology of poetry, spoken word, fiction, creative non-fiction, spoken word texts, as well as black and white artwork and photography, explores the question of how mixed-race women in North America identify in the twenty-first century. Contributions engage, document, and/or explore the experiences of being mixed-race, by placing interraciality as the center, rather than periphery, of analysis.
Exhibition Essay And Retrospective - "Laura Kina: A Many-Splendored Thing", Laura Kina
Exhibition Essay And Retrospective - "Laura Kina: A Many-Splendored Thing", Laura Kina
Laura Kina
Larry Lee. “Laura Kina: A Many-Splendored Thing.” Foundation for Asian American Independent Media 15th Annual Asian American Showcase catalogue. 2010. April 2 - May 30, 2010 Gene Siskel Film Center A retrospective featuring over thirty selected paintings, drawings and textiles (1995-present) from her Refrigerator, Hapa Soap Opera, Loving, Aloha Dreams, and Devon Avenue Sampler series as wellas some early and new works on exhibit for the first time. Kina's art collectively embraces "ikigai" or the Japanese belief of "a sense of life worth living" and reflects her "postcolonial pop aesthetic" as a multiracial Okinawan Jewish artist/educator/scholar living in a South …
Cover Image And Featured Artist - Zeek: A Jewish Journal Of Thought And Culture, Laura Kina
Cover Image And Featured Artist - Zeek: A Jewish Journal Of Thought And Culture, Laura Kina
Laura Kina
Kina, Laura “Sugar.” ZEEK: A Jewish Journal of Thought and Culture. Winter 2010. Cover image and p.62-65.
Art Series - Sugar, Laura Kina
Art Series - Sugar, Laura Kina
Laura Kina
Set during the 1920’s-1940’s, Laura Kina’s SUGAR paintings (2010-present) recall obake ghost stories and feature Japanese and Okinawan picture brides turned machete carrying sugar cane plantation field laborers on the Big Island of Hawaii. Kina’s paintings take us into a beautiful yet grueling world of manual labor, cane field fires and flumes. View the series: http://www.laurakina.com/sugar.html