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Film Screening, Q&A, and Reception—"Masters of Modern Design"
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Film Screening, Q&A, and Reception—"Masters of Modern Design"
FREE
From the hand-drawn typeface on the cover of The Godfather to Herman Miller’s biomorphic coffee table, the work of Japanese American designers including Ruth Asawa, George Nakashima, Isamu Noguchi, S. Neil Fujita, and Gyo Obata permeated postwar culture. While these second generation Japanese American artists have been celebrated, less-discussed is how their World War II incarceration—a period of intense hardship and discrimination—had a powerful effect on their lives and art.
Masters of Modern Design: The Art of the Japanese American Experience is a co-production between JANM’s Watase Media Arts Center and KCET for the series ARTBOUND, explores the ways in which their camp experiences impacted their lives, influenced their art, and sent them on trajectories that eventually led to their changing the face of American culture with their immense talents.
A Q&A with the filmmakers and some of the people interviewed for the documentary and a light reception will follow the screening. This program is free, but RSVPs are recommended.
The film will be broadcast in Southern California on KCET and available for streaming on kcet.org/artbound starting May 15. Please check their website in May for more information.
In the Tateuchi Democracy Forum
Image: Ruth Asawa, 1952. Photo by Imogen Cunningham. ©2019 Imogen Cunningham Trust.