Category Archives: Coming Soon!

Yoshitomo Nara Ain’t Nobody’s Fool

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I’ll be in NY next weekend, for the US Open (YAY!), and I’m hoping to have a moment for this-the new Yoshitomo Nara exhibit at the Asia Society.

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Split into three sections, Isolation, Rebellion, and Music, the exhibit promises a retrospective of Nara’s work.

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You know what I think could be amazing, and that shows how shallow I am? The Gift Shop. Oh Yeah.

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If you are there on the 9th, Celebrate Fashion Week with this event celebrating the latest of Tokyo styles-Tokyo Look. “Celebrating New York Fashion Week, this event highlights some of the latest styles and their cultural significance.” (via)

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Can you spend a bit more? Then go to the Gala Benefit celebration of the exhibit, on the 13th of September.

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When the dress style is Tokyo Cool, how could you possibly go wrong? (and remember, if you go-send us your review!)

 

Big In Japan, Lego-Style

Lego freaks sometimes need a theme. At least, I know my son gets inspired by something, and down the Lego rabbit hole he goes.

What better topic for Lego fanatics than “Big in Japan“? Here’s just one amazing example.

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Who is this gang? It’s the “wonderful characters from Hayao Miyazaki’s My Neighbor Totoro [as built] by Iain Heath (Ochre Jelly)

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The maker of this fine Lego Totoro has grand plans for his work. “These models represent “phase one” of my 2010 “Miyazakitopia” (宮崎トピア) project: a Lego tribute to the master animator, Hayao Miyazaki!
The completed diorama will be displayed in its entirety in October at BrickCon 2010, as part of the “Big In Japan” collaborative themed display
.” (via)

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Back in January, the Brothers Brick announced a collaborative display, to be unveiled at this October BrickCon in Seattle. And they wanted to be sure you had both inspiration, and plenty of time to work.

Of course, there had to be some impetus for this work. Here’s what one of  Brothers Brick had to say: “From the epic Battle of Sekigahara to Godzilla battling Mothra in retro-future Tokyo, both reality and fiction from the Land of the Rising Sun provide plenty of inspiration for great LEGO creations.

Many of my earliest posted LEGO creations were inspired by the legends and history of land where I was born, and I’m personally looking forward to building again from that cultural heritage.” (via)

(What is the Brothers Brick? A site for fans of Lego, showcasing some of the coolest Lego creations around. And no, this ain’t just kid’s stuff!)

Can you think of your own Japanese-inspired Lego goodness? Well, it’s time to start building. Just a few months left before Seattle BrickCon and the big unveiling!

Bento hits the Big Screen

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Bento fans know that the art form has just been waiting for its chance to shine on the big screen. Now, it’s here. Bento Monogatari is a new short film-almost finished-by filmmaker Pieter Dirkx.

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What’s it about? Here’s a synopsis-courtesy of the artist himself. “Yvonne tries to put some new life into her failed marriage by delving into the world of Japanese pop-culture. Every morning, she prepares a cute Japanese lunchbox (Bento) for her husband, Frank, who works in the waste collection centre. Frank is more interested in his beautiful, young, male colleague and secretly throws his lunchbox away before anyone sees it…”

True confession? I was sold on this as soon as I saw that rockin’ hot pink wig!

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Scheduled to be completed in September, here’s a sneak peek until then.

Smooth Moves from Kenichi Ebina

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My husband and I are both big fans of America’s Best Dance Crew and if we had the chance to go on the MTV show Made, we’d both become Hip-Hop dancers. (Okay-pathetic ones, yes, but we’d have fun.) Needless to say, there was no way we were missing the chance to see incredible Hip-Hop virtuoso Kenichi Ebina dance in our own home town!

“Kenichi Ebina is a solo self-taught dance performer [who] started out dancing Freestyle HipHop and expanding his style to Poppin’, Lockin’, Mime, House, Jazz, Contemporary and Ethnic dance.” (via) Oh yeah-and the guy has won Showtime at the Apollo, Grand Champion TWICE.

In the area? Thursday night, UMASS Amherst Fine Arts Center. See you there! Can’t make it? Sorry–but here’s a taste of what you’ll be missing. This is Ebina’s performance from the 2009 National Cherry Blossom Festival.

New Bento Boxes–as soon as we unpack!

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On Tuesday, a freight truck pulled up outside the store and we accepted 75 boxes of new bento boxes and water bottles, straight from Japan. As soon as we finish unpacking, and have the chance to take some photos-they will be up at the site. Until then, see what’s already in stock at japanistic.

And we promise to keep unpacking, and unpacking, and unpacking….

The 5 College Pan Asian Network Conference in our hometown! (And my rant about race.)

I’m sad I only found out about it from a post on Angry Asian Man, but still glad to be reminded of the many reasons we live in Western Massachusetts. (My head is in the Olympic clouds.)

Coming this weekend, the 5Pan 4th Annual Spring Issues and Leadership Conference. (Okay, I’m sure they aren’t just issues specific to Spring–could be winter or fall…) It’s coming this weekend-Saturday, February 27th, from 9:30 0n at UMASS Amherst.

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Want to know more about what’s planned? Visit the conference website.

Two workshops that look especially compelling to me:

  • Eric Hamako - Monsters, Messiahs, or Something Else?:  Mixed-Race in Science Fiction Movies
Popular movies are telling stories about Mixed-Race but what are they saying? Will vigorous hybrid messiahs herald racial salvation? Will degenerate hybrid monsters cause a racial apocalypse? Are you prepared to talk about and talk back to the movies that students love? We’ll explore White Supremacist and Christian Supremacist ideas about Mixed-Race prevalent in current science fiction movies like Harry Potter, Blade, and Underworld and why people shouldn’t believe the hype… or the hate.
  • Panel: Richard Chu, Falguni Sheth, Larry Hunt – White Liberal Racism: An Oxymoron?
“White Liberal Racism: an Oxymoron?” The panel will discuss whether there is such a thing as “white liberal racism,” and if it does, what forms this takes, especially within the context of the Five Colleges and people’s experiences as Asian Americans. Larry Hunt, Human Resource Director of Smith College, will share his own insights to the issue as “progressive” institutions like Smith College face the challenge of expanding the proportion of minority hires, and how policies even from these so-called “liberal” and “progressive” institutions may inadvertently veil a form of racism that may go unchallenged or unquestioned. Richard Chu, Five College Assistant Professor of History at UMass Amherst, and Falguni Sheth, Associate Professor of Philosophy and Political Theory at Hampshire College, will describe their experiences teaching in liberal but predominantly white institutions, and dissect how administrative policies, the tenuring process, and the core curricula of their institutions may also reflect a form of racism.

I’m especially interested in the last one because as a member of this community, we deal with issues around white liberal racism all the time. And I think what happens in this largely academic environment translates to things that happen in the larger community, Full disclosure–my husband and I are both white, raising our son who is also a strong, opinionated, confident, happy Korean-American kid.

Sometimes, this area doesn’t know what to make of us as a family, even when certain people think that we’ll “get” them because we are in the special white liberal club. Just because I am part of a multi-racial family doesn’t mean that while I am grocery shopping, my son and I want to talk about your friend who adopted a child from Guatemala 20 years ago so you really know how it is. Nope. Sorry friend. And your friend, who has a daughter who was left at a train station in Kazakhstan? You know, I just need bagels and toilet paper. (and why do these encounters most often happen at Whole Foods?)

We get it from all sides, from white academics who want to school us, or connect with us in whatever arbitrary way they have chosen, but also from some in the Korean-American academic community who often want to present us with a very particular vision of what it is to be Korean-American and what our son “should” be.

We know it’s not unique to this area. No matter what, and no matter where we are, as a multi-cultural, adopted, Korean-American man, our son will be forging his own way through all of this and hopefully, owning whatever vision he choses of his identity. As his parents, our job is to talk with him, to process these events with him, to be there for him, and of course, to connect him with others who have made their way along it and to let him know that the choosing of his individual path is perfectly legitimate.

And oh yeah, hope you can make it to the conference!

Japanese Emerging Artist Exhibition in New York

I wish I were going to be in New York for this.

Sponsored in part by Japanese gallery Pepper’s.

(And just what is the Japan/Brooklyn connection?? Hmmm.)


Sneak Peak- MIXED coming soon

When I got some of our latest book catalogs, I was THRILLED to see that another Kip Fulbeck project is on its way. Fulbeck is the author of 100% Hapa, a book we have sold at our stores over and over again, and which was on our coffee table at home for at least a year.

Fulbeck has followed that important work with his new book MIXED: Portraits of Multiracial kids.

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With a forward by Dr. Maya Soetoro-Ng–that’s right, Obama’s sister–the book promises “charming and uplifting images of kids being unabashedly themselves…accompanied by handwritten statements from the children and first-person text from their parents.” (via)

The only problem–the book won’t be out until March. Until then, watch Fulbeck speak about this amazing new project. (And to all involved with the project, I simply say Thank You.

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